Grieving with Cookies.

 

My Aunt Pat (left) and my Uncle Bill (right).

 

Shoving cookies, one after the other, into my gaping maw hasn’t helped.

Watching endless hours of television and films hasn’t helped.

The methods I’ve chosen to grieve just aren’t working.

You see, I’m a private person, (no one reads this thing) and my Aunt died a few days ago. She was the oldest of 4 sisters, my mother being the youngest.

I haven’t told anyone but my Dad and my business partner because I just don’t feel like sharing her life or my grief on Facebook or Twitter. She was more than a solicitous quickly drawn paragraph for responses. And she was so much more than an ‘I’m sorry for your loss.’ to me. That’s just my style, no offense to those that reach out, which is a normal thing to do.

She started out as the Aunt I knew relatively nothing about. We lived in a different state when I was growing up, so my visits were relegated to holidays.

When I was 33, I had made a career change, to spend focused time on my screenwriting by moving AWAY from Los Angeles. It was a good decision at the time and my Aunt invited me to stay with her until I felt settled in Dallas. She brought me into her family like I was one of her kids, even though we were blood strangers.

It was awkward at first because we really didn’t know each other but after a month or two, I realized, from an interests point of view, I was looking at a damn mirror of myself. This woman loved science fiction and indulged me in multiple what-if conversations and movies nights and as I began working on some of my first screenplays in her house. Her addiction to the Law and Order franchise of shows leaked into my interest pile and I started watching them with her. Every time I walked into the room, that show, whether it was SVU or Criminal Intent or L & O, was on the television.

It started with me catching a few minutes of the show as I headed for the kitchen, which then turned into a scene, then more, then an entire episode…and pretty soon we were watching all the shows, all the time. That time with her and those shows inspired my first feature screenplay. And because writing for me was and is a deep and personal activity, she became a woven part of that treasured memory.

Not many people reach my core, but she was one of them.

And I don’t know how to move forward.

With the pandemic, time is elongated because the funeral homes are over-burdened. Thinking about the morbid details of her waiting to be sent to the great beyond give me anxiety.

There’s no one to talk to about this, and to those that I have, it’s been a miniscule admission of detail.

I can’t work, I can’t concentrate, the cries come in spurts because my love for her was buried deep and strongly attached to the center. I visualize letting her go like digging for a silver chain that’s been growing under a giant redwood for a century.

I am so very grateful I could see her a day or so before she left this planet. With her kids, and another nephew, we had all come together to coordinate the delivery of an electric chair that would help her stand up and lay down because she needed to be able to sleep in it. I texted her the next day and she told me how well she had slept that night. If you knew her, you’d know why that was key and how hard sleep was to come by.

On that day, we talked about Christmas, which had come late because of the pandemic and her recent hospital visit. She tried a few times to order my Christmas present and if you knew her, you’d know how difficult that could be. I said to not worry about it and concentrate on feeling better. It wasn’t important, it was just a material thing. I wanted her comfortable and safe.

Apparently the stars aligned for her and she did get that order in because my cousin delivered that material thing and that’s the only time I’ve lost myself in tears in public thus far. I can’t even part with the box it came in. I knew the struggle involved to coordinate ordering the item and to see it sitting there on my counter said she loved me and that’s all I really needed anyway.

I will miss her deeply.

 

I don’t even want to write about this…

I don’t even want to write about this, but I feel like in some infinitesimal way, it’s important to civilization to catalog my experiences in 2020 with the global pandemic of Covid-19.

As I sit here writing, I’ve just finished crunching down on stale crackers that I revived in the toaster oven because I forgot to buy more and I’m deathly afraid of going to the store.

Why am I afraid? Just over a week ago I was on my back with what I think were the symptoms of this virus spreading across the world like wild fire.  It was the worst 3 weeks of my life, and probably the worst illness I’ve had so far.  My mother went through it with me, and every day we were sick, I was hoping she wouldn’t get worse than me, because at her age, it was something to fear mightily.

I had all of the symptoms but my town had not instituted or even had testing when I was sick. We are also in the nexus of knowing that some areas are testing for antibodies to see if you’ve had the virus but they aren’t available in the state of Texas at the moment.

So, I’ve been ordering food once a week via a delivery service and spraying down everything that arrives with either a Lysol spray for thick boxes or rubbing alcohol for thin membrane packaging.

To have this cloud of doubt over your head of whether you’ve had this virus or not is enough to interrupt your sleep patterns and give you nightmares of going through what you went through but worse.

I’m also a giving person, I want to help but I can’t give blood (you must wait a total of 28 days after symptoms cease to give it according to the red cross attendant I spoke to), and since I don’t know if I’ve truly had it, I don’t want to step foot outside of the confines of the property I’m on.

I have a great n99 respirator mask but I’m also a face-toucher, and a nail-biter during stressful times. This has been the hardest part, which is knowing I’d probably be okay to go out and buy non stale crackers, among other basic food stuffs, but that cloud of uncertainty keeps me from going.

In Italy, in the last 24 hours, almost a thousand people died (3/27/2020). It’s a number I’m having trouble visualizing and it’s causing much despair and grief.  Many of us feel powerless being stuck in our homes.  We know that staying home is the best way to protect all, but it leaves us without agency to fight.

Some have taken up sewing. I’m afraid to make any masks for awhile until I reach that red cross limitation so that I’m not passing on any virus particles to infect anyone else. I’ve given some money away to those struggling to buy food, but it still feels powerless to only be able to help some not many.

People are raging  at the delayed response the President has given, each and every day is a threat to our survival when he speaks. Social media is blooming with blame, desperation, finger pointing, depression, grave humor and attempts to lighten the mood of a planet that is sinking farther into darkness.

The United States is, in my opinion and from using data collected from other countries, a week or so away from a total overwhelming disaster. Many urban areas have reached almost complete capacity in their ICUs and the numbers aren’t slowing. Smaller cities are next. One might hope that once larger cities have evened out the spread, they can lend a hand when smaller places go under.

If you’re reading this from a decade away, be thankful you made it through this. The world went through hell to keep you safe.

Post Table Read

Last night was probably one of the most surreal nights of my life. Ten actors gathered around a table sardine style to read my screenplay out loud and on camera. The incredible efforts they put in to bring it to life are more than I could have hoped for in this lifetime. I just wish I had been there to experience it. I was physically there, but I was also playing director and stage manager so my writer’s brain was caught up in reading the text on the page as they spoke rather than “listening” to the story.

If you’re planning on table read of your own work, I would suggest you hire a friend to handle the mundane details of hosting and getting every one focused and ready to shoot. It’s essential to hear your story without being on book, or worrying about whether the food you made is getting cold, as I was. Luckily, I had a great camera department and we knocked off some great close ups and great sound too. I’ll be able to listen to the story again in the near future.

Physically I was located away from the actors enough so that couldn’t see me write anything down, but I was within ear shot. I have no bearing on whether that made them happy or nervous. I would think they’d NOT want to see me scratching notes down on the script as they spoke.

Overall, I’m really pleased with how everything played out. I did cast the script well, making me wonder if I someday I might want to direct…but doesn’t everybody want to direct?

I think the perfect cap note to the evening was when the actors requested to keep their scripts and had me sign them. I signed them like I was writing a check without thinking about the fact that they were asking for an autograph. Later as it sunk in, the requests made me feel very special.

If you’re in the Dallas area, and you need some great talent, I now have a thick file of actors you will want to work with.

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On a more personal note, I found it difficult to get through this night of excitement with the heavy thoughts of two people in the entertainment industry who thought the universe would fair better without them. They will never know how much I cared for them, but their parents might. To the Koenig and Osmond families, you have my deepest sympathies for the loss of your sons. I do have a dose of experience with what you’re going through and no words will ever be able to describe or acknowledge the grief you’re going through. Only know that those who cared for them outside of your circle of family and friends are thinking good thoughts for you during this crisis.

It’s okay to be cheesy.

Ah, the smooth sounds of Careless Whisper…yes by George Michaels, but wait, there are no words and I feel as if I’ve just taken a valium.

We’ve all been stuck in an elevator with Musak playing in the background. It’s popular to hate this easy going style of music, but I offer up reason to keep it alive.

I’m here to tell you, it’s not a sin to like Musak. Some of my favorites evoke a giddy laughter that only a good joke can muster, and that my friends, is something. Personally, I prefer the smoother and more smarmy tones of A Man and a Woman by Sir Julian, but I’ll take a Careless Whisper anyday.

When was the last time you actually stepped into an elevator that played Musak. I can’t remember when. It needs to be brought back. I’m stuck listening to it on MSN Radio. The world would be different if more Musak played in the world’s elevators.

Think about the tone of the room in the Al-Jazeera news paper offices when asked to evacuate their building because it’s being shut down again for promoting terrorism. Can you picture the staff standing there fully enshrined in Ghutras on their last elevator ride down with The Girl From Ipanema cordially accompanying them on the way down? Priceless.

Muzak is here to stay folks and I’m sorry to say it’s because of people like me. I can’t stand an uphappy world and Musak brings in da joy.