mallorys_camera: (Default)
Then there was the moment my lunch companion Kimberly—a real find as my beloved friend Marybeth would say—inserted “I’m Jewish” into the middle of a heated conversation about Broadway musicals.

Like I wouldn’t immediately recognize a member of the tribe!

Was it my imagination, or was she observing me for a reaction out of the corner of her eye?

“I’m Jewish, too,” I said.

She looked astonished. “With a last name like DiLucchio?”

“Me, Modigliani, and the Fitzi-Continis,” I said. It’s a line I use a lot although strictly speaking, I have nothing in common with Modigliani and the Fitzi-Continis. I’m not really an Italian Jew. I inherit my tribal membership from my mother who was a nice German-Polish Jewish girl from Brooklyn in between bouts of insanity.

(Sometimes I amuse myself on long plane rides by spinning an alternative family tree for the amusement of whoever’s sitting next to me. I’m Sephardic! The family emigrated from Morocco to Syracusa some time in the 16th century. And then my father and my mother immigrated to the States just in time to avoid being turned into soap. That’s what whoever gets for starting a conversation and not leaving me to read in peace.)

“I guess with a name like ‘Smith,’ I really shouldn’t talk,” said Kimberly. “We changed it for obvious reasons. Both sets of grandparents emigrated from Russia.”

We talked a bit about synagogues. There’s a cool synagogue in Woodstock and another cool one in Kingston. There are no cool synagogues within easy driving distance on this side of the river, which is probably a good thing. If there was a cool synagogue here, I’d feel guilty about not going to services more often.

###

I thought of this conversation a couple of days later when I read about the San Diego synagogue shooting. Only one person dead, so the 24/7 news cycle had a hard time justifying the use of the word “massacre.”

The shooting took place on the last day of Passover. Six months to the day after the Tree of Life attack in Pittsburgh.

The shooter was gunning for the rabbi. The carnage might have been a lot worse except for two things: First, a woman interposed herself between the shooter and the reb. Her name was Lori Kaye—no relation to Danny! But obviously another Jew whose forbearers thought protective mimicry might be a handy survival tool.

As you can see, they were wrong.

And then the shooter’s rifle jammed. The rabbi called it a miracle.

We’d all like to think when that moment arrives and those armed madmen are coming for us—just as we’ve always known they’d come for us because for Jews of a certain generation, the image of the camps is a kind of racial memory—we’d have the presence of mind to step in front of the gun. To shield others more worthy. Gallantry is always a slap in the face of oppressors. In fact, many of us are perpetually on the prowl for a martyrdom that’s worthy of us.

I’ve never been on the receiving end of firepower, so it’s impossible to predict how I would react. I’d like to think I’d interpose my own body if the gunman were aiming at either of my two sons.

Maybe I’d try to shield a handful of close friends.

But a rabbi? Never.

Incidents like this, oddly, do make me more sympathetic to Israel’s hardline political excesses. Fuck compromise. They’re gonna hate us one way or the other. We might as well have them hate us and get what we want.

###

My other adventure was a spur-of-the-moment trip into the City at the behest of L.

L was born with severe scoliosis, which for one reason or another, her parents did nothing to correct when she was young.

Consequently, she is as twisted as a hobgoblin in a fairytale.

For the most part, L ignores her scoliosis. Which is a pretty sane attitude to have toward a chronic disabling condition.

The deal with chronic disabling conditions is that generally, other people do not want to hear about them—unless they are professionals who can make $$$ off them or people who have chronic disabling conditions of their own, in which case they’re merely waiting for a break in your complaints to launch into a monologue about their own.

L is a pretty sunny person generally, and over time, as I’ve gotten to know her better, I’ve come to understand that many of her more annoying quirks can be traced back to coping mechanisms she developed to deal with her disability. (Yeah, yeah, yeah, we all have annoying quirks, and they can generally be traced back to something.)

In recent months, though, L’s scoliosis has gotten a lot worse. To the point where it’s threatening to compromise her quality of life.

What to do?

At 80, she’s a bad candidate for spinal surgery. Even if spinal surgery had a better success rate.

Then her chiropractor told her about this thing called soft bracing.

And I offered to go with her to her appointment.

First she said, No. Because she’s very independent and snaps at people who offer her assistance she wishes she did not need.

“Well, you know, most people don’t remember half the stuff their doctors tell them,” I said. “The whole process of going to the doctor can be so overwhelming. I’ve acted as a medical liaison for lots of people.” Translation: Ordinary people take me with them to doctors’ visits all the time so it doesn’t mean you’re a cripple.

So, she agreed.

But then she said No again.

And then she said Yes again.

When she said No again, I was in no mood to argue with her about it.

And it was pretty annoying when on Thursday night she asked me, “What are you doing tomorrow…?”

What I was doing was work: A couple of clients had dropped assignments on me with nonnegotiable deadlines that all fell “tomorrow.” I was up till 2am pounding them all out.

And then up at 6am to make the train. L had a 10am appointment. I figured it would take us 45 minutes to get from Grand Central Station to Park Avenue in the upper 80s. That’s actually the same amount of time it would have taken me to walk. But L cannot walk—which is one of the reasons we were going to this doctor’s appointment.

It actually took us an hour and a half to get to the doctor’s office. Since Trump’s election, midtown Manhattan has been a horror show because of the security detail around Trump Tower. And then there was a funeral service for a vet who’d been killed in Afghanistan; half the northbound and southbound boulevards above Grand Central were closed to traffic.

(We were needed to say goodbye somehow, [profile] lifeinroseland observed afterwards. Which was an excellent way to look at it.)

The appointment itself was interesting because I got to look at L’s X-rays and learn about the soft brace itself, which is a pretty nifty device. I doubt, though, that it will do very much for L; she’s long past the point where her spine might be amenable to correction. It might keep her condition from deteriorating even further, the operative word there being “might.” The curvature in her spine is seriously impinging on her left lung cavity, squashing that left lung, which I imagine makes it very difficult to breathe with any kind of exertion.

There’s a set of exercises that go along with the soft brace. Schroth exercises, they’re called. One of the things that happens with scoliosis is that since you’re so off-balance, some of your muscles hypertrophy while others begin to atrophy. Schroth exercises are designed to regenerate atrophied muscles. While the soft brace is supporting you in a straight position, you can begin to use those muscles again.

I’m glad I went with L. I did the nurse thing. Told the doctor when I saw that she was tired and needed a break, initiated discharge planning, took multiple videos and photos of the rather complicated process involved in putting on and taking off the soft brace, which I then uploaded for L onto a private YouTube channel. Each soft brace is customized to the specific curvature of each individual’s spine, so the procedure varies widely from patient to patient.

Also, I doubt that L would even have known how to catch a cab without me.

I was happy to do it. Although practically hallucinatory with exhaustion by the end of the day.

It was tulip time on Park Avenue! Every median between East 54th and East 86thth planted with enormous orange tulips! Thousands of them:

tulips
mallorys_camera: (Default)
Murder and mayhem fascinate me. Why would anyone want to beat six people into bloody pulp over a X-Box? What kinds of wacky personal narrative culminate in a death struggle over video games?

But of all the bizarre crimes of passion floating through headlines right now (distractions from more substantiative issues like the war and the elections and the soaring cost of oil) the one that’s really caught my imagination is Mark Hacking.

Mark Hacking is the nice Mormon boy who perpetrated the fantasy that he was going to medical school upon wife and respectable LDS family successfully for several years. And when it finally fell apart – a little light reconnaissance work on the part of the wife, Lori, and really you have to wonder why it took her so long – bam! He shoots her in the middle of the night. Rather cold-heartedly disposes of her body by dumping in a trash bin (thereby violating a basic Law & Order premise that if you know your victim, you’re likely to treat your corpse more gently, covering it with a raggedy blanket or something.) Buys a new mattress. Buys some cigarettes – lime-flavored Camels – at a local 7/11. Doesn’t speak during this transaction but in between Lady Macbeth-like wringing of his hands, silently signals the store clerk not to tell his wife. (Cigarettes! Bad Mormon, ba-a-a-a-a-d Mormon!) Goes on nation-wide TV for an emotional appeal: Help Me Find Lori! Then strips off his clothes and merrily prances around the Deseret No Tell Motel until the local cops notice he’s behaving peculiarly and pick him up for questioning.

The case fascinates me because I, too, have a propensity for lying although I’m not sure I’ve ever spun out anything as elaborate as a parallel life in which I enrolled at Hogwarts for the Halt and Lame. Still. I have two old dolls in the store, the Franklin Mint’s Jackie Onassis and Lucille Ball. Jackie, my favorite of the two, generally stands regal and ignored in all her Oleg Cassini-garbed splendor; it’s Lucy who’s the crowd pleaser.

“Look! I-Love-Lucy!” (I-Love-Lucy, one word.) “Is she for sale.”

“No,” I explain with a sad but radiant smile. “She was my grandmother’s. After my grandmother… passed, my sisters and I got to pick mementos. They went for the expensive jewelry. But I picked the dolls. My grandmother never wore her jewelry. But she looked at those dolls every day.”

Ha, ha. Right. Like I’d pass up the chance to inherit a diamond ring.

My lie is serviceable. It establishes me in the eyes of potential customers as sentimental, a little scatter-brained in a business sense, someone from whom you can safely buy chili-themed tschochkes and kitsch at slightly below market value.

But what purpose did Mark Hacking’s lie serve?

Ben, too, is a consummate liar. In fact, he’s a lot better at it than I am, a veritable Duke of Deception in the full Geoffrey Wolfe sense of the term. Over the years I’ve been his dupe many times. There were the lies that had no impact on our shared domestic life – vestiges, I suppose, of his crazy myth-making twenties: his one gay affair had been with Allen Ginsberg; his wife, Sheree, had been William Gibson’s muse and the original of [insert trash-talking, tattooed heroine’s name here]; he’d won several major poetry fellowships while living in a New Mexico commune in the late seventies. Then there were the lies that required major clean-up. The shock when he lured me to Reno to help him with a broken down car only to discover that the police had impounded it because he’d been driving with stolen license plates. The six months after Sports Illustrated laid him off – and People Mag had just laid me off – and we had no income coming in at all except what I could eke out through freelance writing assignments, and he didn’t tell me he had been laid off, he kept insisting: it’s a screw-up in accounting, it’s a screw-up in the mail room. That one was tough. That one threatened our survival.

“So how come you never murdered me in my sleep?” I asked Ben, sifting through the morning headlines over breakfast coffee.

“Murder is a little over the top, don’t you think?” Ben asked mildly. “Can you pass the salt?”

Mormon theology is just so interesting. Patriarchal families eking out hearth on their own homestead planets after death. The Angel Moroni with a real estate license: “This one has a fabulous view of Jupiter –“

And poor Lori Hacking. Bound in eternal marriage to the murderous Mark, she has to go on sharing that split-level ranch-style paradise home with him for all eternity. Presumably with the grown up ghost of the fetus who also got wacked plus all the spermatophytes that might have been turned into finished products if only Mark had had the guts and humility to hit up his rich parents for tuition to a medical school in Grenada.

“Do you think it was the last name that did it?” I asked.

“What do you mean?”

“Well, with a name like ‘Hacking,’” I said. “A name like that predisposes you towards certain kinds of behavior, don’t you think?”

“Well, he didn’t go on a homicidal rampage with a machete,” Ben pointed out, reasonably enough. “Ah, this is sad. Red Adair died.”

"Who?"

“Red Adair. The guy who invented the science of putting out oil well fires?"

I shook my head.

" Remember back in the first Gulf War, how they predicted that the fires in the Kuwaiti wells would burn for years and years? ‘Oh no they won’t,’ Adair told them. And he had them out within six months. He was in his eighties then.” Ben chewed meditatively on a piece of toast. “I remember hearing him do a radio interview a few years ago. ‘I want to go to hell when I die,’ he said. ‘I’ll put out all the fires.’”

In my father’s mansion, there are many Valhallas.

Profile

mallorys_camera: (Default)
Every Day Above Ground

June 2026

S M T W T F S
 1 23 4 5 6
78 9 1011 12 13
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 15th, 2026 07:09 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios