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2025-05-29 08:13 am
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Letter From the Past Me

In a Mood—chiefly because of the weather, which is all opaque white sky & rising ground mists. Since I know The Mood is entirely due to the weather, it seems to me I should be able to control it, force myself into a better mood, and the fact that I can't contributes to my general sense of failure: Like if I were a Real Human Girl, I would have planned better! I wouldn't be in this place I so clearly don't want to be.

Yesterday was filled with small frustrations. The propane tank ran out, & the wrench I've used before to change it didn't seem to want to fit over the joint—initiating a testy email exchange with Icky. At the gym, the spinning bikes were all occupied, so I didn't get to do a complete workout. Mabel has this enormous mat on her back near her tail, which she won't let me loosen with detangler & brush out even after I try calmly to explain to her that it will be a lot more traumatic if I have to take her to the vet to get it shaved off.

None of these things would bother me if it were sunny out.

###

RTT has been logging on to his father's FB account, which is weird because I see Ben's name popping up on the list of People Now Online, & I think, Wait! Aren't you dead? And haven't you been dead for—what? Six years now?

This inspired me to look back at some of the many, many Messenger chats I'd had with Ben, preserved for all eternity in Facebook amber.

We messaged each other often between 2009 and 2019. I'd forgotten all about that. And I suppose if I really wanted to go all archeological, I could exhume all our texts—I have the same phone account now that I had back then.

###

In 2010, I wrote him this letter:

Afterwards I turned on the radio. And you know what was playing? The end of Prekoviev’s Romeo and Juliet. That strange effect with the bassoon breaking through the violins that’s exactly like the sun rising after a night where you imagine everything’s changed but really nothing’s changed because there’s the plow horse, there’s the torturer’s dog and for them it’s just another day above ground.

I used to snoop around quite a bit when we were together. I never found out anything much. Once I ran across a letter you’d written to Shari. I will always love you, you’d written. Nothing’s changed for me. Words to that effect only much better written. It was a very romantic letter. That hurt. Not because you loved her – did you use the word "still?" I don’t remember. But because I didn’t know you loved her.

Another time I found an email you’d written to a friend describing an imaginary day we’d spent at the Skywalker Ranch. (Did you have a long conversation with George Lucas about cigars? I can’t remember now. Maybe I’m embellishing.) That one made me laugh. That one was more your garden variety confabulation, akin to your career as a keyboard player for Flipper.

It was Lucius who first used the word. “Ben,” he chuckled and shook his head. “That guy is just the King of Opaque.”

You remember different things than I remember. You remember me sinking into despair. Calling Cynsa. Calling Andrew. What should I do? She wants to kill herself. But that was after Reno, wasn’t it?

I remember driving to Reno. Your storyline unraveled bit by bit and each change in the script did things to my heart I didn’t know could be done. The cliché turns out to be the best description after all. Your heart literally sinks. The elevator stops and you get out. “Welcome to hell!” says the greeter.

I didn’t understand it. You were supposed to be my redemption. I was supposed to be yours.

And it kept happening.

It kept happening.

Kept happening.

Here’s the thing: you probably did me the biggest favor anyone’s ever done for me in my life to leave me. Because I was the man with my arm in the bear trap. The only way I was going to survive was by cutting off my arm. But I couldn’t. It was a part of me. I was miserable but I couldn’t cut off a part of me. So you did it for me. Surviving’s easier than being miserable. It’s hard to be that miserable.

I’ll never forget how you followed me into my labor with Robin. I don’t know what it was like for you really, I suppose, but for me it was like you were walking right there beside me listening to the wolves howling on the dark side of the moon.

But I could never trust you.

I couldn’t trust you because I knew you’d shaft me given the slightest opportunity. At first you’d shaft me just because you could, I suppose – the Reno thing with the stolen license, the novel contract you never bothered to pursue, that whole web of deception around the Time Warner remuneration.

Was it then that I became such a bitch? I suppose it was – our survival was at stake and that pronoun “our” included two dependent children. Once I became a bitch, there was a reason to lie to me, I suppose. I was such a soul-sucking bitch, wasn’t I? I probably deserved it.

Thing is, I still feel with the arm that’s been hacked off. I still hear your voice in my head. It stopped for a while. But it’s back now. Though I suppose you’ve found your next redemption. My guess is that you’ll marry The Girlfriend in another month or two, when the divorce comes through. What jolly trips the two of you will make in the Girlfriend-mobile – whoops! I mean the Spouse-mobile. And she’ll pay for you to get your teeth fixed too because otherwise how’s she gonna introduce you to all her family and friends?

You have some serious fence mending to do with Robin.


###

Whoa! I thought upon reading this letter. You wrote so good back then, girlfriend!

And that was really my only reaction.

I don't love Ben or his memory anymore, and the 17 years we spent together are actually an embarrassment. Like: What were you thinking? How damaged were you?

Which means, I suppose, I'm considerably less damaged now.

And that's a good thing.
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2025-02-14 09:48 am
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Milo

Valentine’s Day is actually an ancient Roman fertility festival called Lupercal that the greeting card industry jacked up on steroids & mass-marketed.

I bought my vibrator a card, chocolates, & flowers.

I also slept the whole night through, which is practically unheard of. And whaddiya know—the sun is out today! That sepulchral Snowglobe of Doom hunkering down on us lo this week past is lifted! So I am feeling pretty chipper today. Though shortly I must go out & sprinkle salt on the vast sea of ice engulfing the driveway.

###

Ellen had to put her dog down yesterday.

I offered to go with her to the vet, but Ellen is even more of a No Whinging Allowed! type than I am, so of course, she wouldn’t hear of it.

So instead, I told Ellen all about Milo, the most wonderful dog ever…



Milo was originally RTT’s dog. But, of course, RTT was the most horrible teenage boy ever & completely neglected him, so I ended up as Milo's caretaker.

In Monterey, we lived five blocks away from one of the most beautiful beaches in the world, and I took Milo down there two or three times a day where he ran & frolicked & had a particular obsession with large pieces of driftwood—bigger than he was!—which he would mouth merrily & try to drag home.

Milo journeyed with us all around the country when we traveled with the circus. And when we ended up in Ithaca & Ben walked out on me, Milo was the most faithful of companions.

Ben abandoned me with all the animals—two dogs, two cats, and a disabled box turtle. I was so destitute, having lost my business, my house, all my possessions, & all my savings, I could barely feed myself & RTT during the half-the-time I played custodial parent, let alone the pets. There was simply nothing I could do for money in Ithaca.

I knew the moment I left Ithaca, I would be able to find work again—except I couldn’t leave Ithaca because I didn’t trust Ben not to let RTT drop out of school. I had to get RTT through high school.

I’d found a house in a village called Freeville, 10 miles outside of Ithaca. The Cement Bungalo! Freeville was the Meth Capital of Tompkins County, but it was situated in a landscape of almost unearthly beauty, and so, my chief recreation—since I couldn’t afford anything else—became hiking miles & miles & miles every day.

I liked following the creeks to spy on the beavers. I became utterly obsessed with beaver civilization. Beaver lodges! Beaver dams!

Milo accompanied me, ever faithfully at my side. And the Meezer, my all but feral cat, would stalk us, trailing unfaithfully at a distance of 10 yards or so.



One thing about the companion animals in my life: They tend to die at moments just before my life is about to make an enormous change.

Thus, Edward Hopper and Dennis Hopper, my two angora bunnies, leapt so high they broke their spines in 1993, just a few days before I was to drive up to Clarion in Seattle.

Clarion in Seattle is where I met Ben.

Being me, I had some notion that I would cancel Clarion, hire a carpenter to make little bunny wheelchairs, & devote the rest of my life to caring for my little lagamorphian paraplegics.

But I got talked out of it.

###

I left Ithaca in 2012, less than a week after RTT finally graduated from high school.

All sorts of other things were happening, too.

Like Ben collapsed into an encephalitic coma, which turned out to be related to a virulent case of heretofore undiagnosed Hep C.

For a couple of days, it looked like Ben was going to die right then & there, and I wasn’t sure what I was going to do because RTT was not starting at Syracuse University until the fall. Was I gonna have to drag RTT down to the NYC metro for three months? What a nightmare that would be! Because one thing I was absolutely determined was happening: I was gonna get the hell out of Dodge.

But Ben recovered (after a fashion), so phew! Crisis averted.

###

RTT found a home for Nimoy, the disabled box turtle.

I was going to take the two cats—Rutger & the Meezer—with me. But I knew I would never find a place to live with two cats and a dog.

So, I’d tried to get Ben to take Milo. And first, Ben said he would, but then in typical Ben fashion, he weaseled out of it. And I didn’t know what I was gonna do. I couldn’t abandon Milo! But neither could I stay in Ithaca.

But then, Milo was diagnosed with cancer.

I had no money to buy him chemotherapy, and anyway, it was unlikely the chemotherapy would have worked. The cancer was very aggressive.

So, the very last thing I did in Ithaca the morning I left was to have Milo put to sleep.
I had to do it alone. RTT & I, at that point, were barely speaking: I guess he blamed me for his father abandoning me. Ben was the parent who never said, No; I was the parent who attempted—unsuccessfully—to impose some kind of order & discipline on his life. Naturally, RTT always preferred Ben.

Milo lay in my arms as the vet injected the euthanasia, and I stroked him & told him all about Doggie Heaven, which is an enormous beach filled with big sticks to drag, and other dogs to scamper & play with, and the beautiful crystal-clear ocean to swim in.

Milo’s eyes were closed.

But just before he died, he opened his eyes, looked deep into my soul, so lovingly & compassionately that I could feel him blessing me.

###

The NDE description of heaven is a long white tunnel, filled with light, that you kinda wiggle through like a kid in one of those McDonald’s play areas.

When you make it through to the other side, all your dead family are supposed to be waiting with a big picnic lunch.

My family hated me. None of them are gonna be there on the other side of the white light with a basket lined in red and white checked cloth filled with celestial deviled eggs!

But Milo will be there. And the irascible Meezer. And pawky Rutger. And Dennis Hopper & Edward Hopper.

And together, we will all go to visit the beavers—-who in Heaven live in golden dams and speak English in the most mellifluous voices that resonate like the finest W.H. Auden poetry.