Sharing shoes and stories |
Storied Legacy I haven't walked in your shoes. I tried them on, but I tripped. They didn't fit me: they were yours. I haven't lived your journey--I was too busy surviving my own. We each carved a path through the underbrush, were sucked in undertows, and almost sank in the quicksand of our own making. Sometimes our shadows passed each other-- the echoes of our voices reverberating in empty stairwells. Once I snagged your almost empty glass only to remember I never liked martinis. Especially, warm ones. My mother had a lamb's wool jacket - black with a mink collar. Tassled cord tied the brain tightly. She left it behind but it never fit me. I gave it away to a girl who sold it never knowing its stories. She was the poorer even if she did get 500 dollars for it. Mom was a dresser's dream. Pucci designed a fabric just for her. She wore pahmi when no one knew quite what it was. It was soft and warm but it never fit me either. The first real estate broker in New Jersey and the second-highest in sales five years running, she could close any deal and outswear any builder. She wanted only the best for me-- the castle, the prince, the white knight. I was supposed to marry the doctor or the lawyer, be in the country club and wear a size two. I never fit into any of her expectations. My Navy dad would roll his eyes, shrug, and never say a word when Mother was on a rant, riding it till she tamed the bucking beast. He was very smart, my dad. He once said not to argue with my mother, never talk back to her because, if I did, it wouldn't matter that I might have been right: I'd be wrong for talking back. Pick my battles he always said. Choose ones where more than a battle is at stake. If it won't affect the war, it isn't worth the blood. Dad kept my secrets. He also told me the right person for me would see his princess no matter the camouflage. He was right about that too. I just needed to get my lenses in the right focus. He told me I'd make a great lawyer because once I got going, I could logic the hell out of any argument-- except that whole battle/war thing would probably end with me in jail. They were always proud of me except they could have been prouder. Even though King Arthur made me a Princess of Camelot, it was the closest I ever came to the parental vision. In his cups, Richard Burton would regal all who would listen with his 'Princess' story. He, when I was six, charged me to be a teller of stories, a writer of grand tales, and to keep Camelot alive and flourishing. That, indeed, I have done. For who would dare disappoint a teary-eyed king? Never I. Still, I didn't fit anyone's parameters. Eventually, I realized that I no longer cared: I fit me. Too bad my first marriage was over at the moment he realized I wasn't a virgin. We'd never discussed it, but then, we only knew each other a couple of weeks before making an epically abysmal decision. Years earlier, within two weeks of my arriving at my all-girls, finishing school type college I'd gotten my ears pierced, (which, at the time, was the pinnacle of parental disdain), gotten drunk, gotten high, and gotten laid. I never looked back. Along the way, I expect I should have caught every bug known to man, at least gotten pregnant or been dead several times. Maybe the caterpillar was right. The White Rabbit thought so. By the time I'd hit high school, my parents were rich. As in filthy. Along with that came the 70's answer to stress, never enough sleep, missed meals, and high expectations. The Big V. Valium was the socialite's dirty secret; the one the doctors said was not habit-forming. They lied. 2.5 to 5 to 10 to 15 to 20. It was an ongoing exercise in always needing a little bit more to calm down, to sleep, to ease the anxiety, to get through that meeting or closing. Valium replaced food. Was washed down with innumerable whiskey sours - shaken. When the inevitable crash came, dad and I closed up the office, he changed jobs and they, conveniently, moved halfway across the country from home and the doctor who had continued to prescribe the now Verboten. Living in a motel while waiting on the new house to be ready, Mom kicked the Valium habit and quietly replaced it with beer-- easily available when cocktails were not. Mom was never the same after she was quietly retired. And yet, she was still the grande dame, the queen bee, and the center of the universe. I never fit the mold they cast, or I broke it. I colored outside the lines or simply drew my own pictures. And yes, oh yes, I sprinted through quagmires, spent one night locked in the Louvre. and another in the Catacombs outside Rome. I played D&D in the NYC subways seeking forbidden treasures and thought I was immortal: even the caterpillar said so. Took on the 'Old Boys' club and won, taking my winnings around the world, into the Ritz and beyond. I wasn't skinny or beautiful; I was no one's idea of arm candy. Yet Jonathan Frid and I spent hours discussing literature; Gwynplaine, Pip, Pierre Bezukhov, and how they shared much in common. Burgess Meridith hired me to run his stables and then, in a drunken fever, tried to ride me. Jan Michael Vincent said he'd never slept with a brilliant woman before, collected walking sticks, and loved cinnamon toast. He had one of the most beautiful souls I've ever known. And life went ever onward for us all. I had grand and glorious loves with the sort of men one never marries, discovered that women do not necessarily know what makes a woman feel good, and delved into the seamier side of things best left alone. I was a free spirit, an adventure junkie (if not an adrenaline one), and I just tucked the adventures away to write about one day down the road. Early on, I learned that regret was for someone else. Early on, I learned that there was something positive to be found within every experience, disastrous or otherwise. Sometimes, I needed to look really hard to find the 'something'--but I always did, sooner or later. Sometimes, it took years, but I'd wake up one morning to an epiphany that gilded the edges of something rotten with something quite shiny. Some were diamonds. Others made rhinestones look dazzling. But there was a lesson in it and I learned and moved onwards. I did always have difficulty getting my old stick shift MG into reverse. I've never walked in your shoes. But I've walked many a mile in umpteen pairs of my own. My journeys and those of others are as alike as two fries and as disparate as escargot and bubble gum. We all have our journeys to make, our tales to tell (or not), and our baggage to carry --or leave by the side of the road. Petty or major addictions are equally difficult to overcome; to realize that they are, indeed, an addiction. One has to choose not to drink today, not to get high right now, not to give in to whatever it is that wraps its insidious fingers around our throats this minute. Large spaces of time only matter when looking backward. Remember, I didn't do reverse so forward was the only, however difficult, option. If anyone had ever told me that boring could be a good thing, that one could go years without a grand adventure, I would have laughed. Uproariously. In sheer disbelief. No longer. Life changes us. The brilliant lights of children. The specters of decisions poorly made or executed. The weight of the mud when one is at the very bottom of the hole. The exhilaration of self-love. The intrinsic knowing that one has undergone a change for the better. I do not judge others by the path they choose. I cannot. I have not that right. There is no stone that I can throw. I know what is right for me and my belief system. I know what I can and must do for all to be right in my world. I know that in every crowd there are galaxies passing by that I have no concept about nor understanding of what makes those worlds tick. I can only be kind, be honest, and remember what my dad told me long ago. Don't argue with your mother or, (sorry, Dad) the mothers out there because it is pointless. I can speak only of my truths, my beliefs, my worries, my fears, and my glories. These days, I prefer not to wear shoes at all, but to tread gently on the footprints in the dust, knowing that I too, leave footprints behind me. For no one lives a perfect life. No one. Grand adventures aside, I regret nothing. I would not be me without living the life I've led. Each of us can only walk the path we've chosen in the sneakers, the mules, the stiletto heels, or the steel-toe boots we've chosen. Or, eventually, go barefoot. Even still, glass shatters and gravel gouges. Somedays, we slog through mud, and other days we cool our feet in mountain streams. Pedicures were invented for a reason. Me, I will happily walk alongside anyone and yearn to hear their stories. I may not agree with their choices. I may not understand their rationale. I do not have to. But their stories? They matter nonetheless. For it is our stories that keep us going, as necessary as the air we breathe. These days? I'm addicted to the stories others tell. There is a trust involved, en exchange of trust, if you will when any storyteller spins their tale. There is still so much to learn and we are each, in our own way, both student and teacher. The shared experiences are what make us undeniably wealthy. Not money, not things. Not the fancy houses or the Home & Garden spreads. I've lived in castles and former homes of major stars. They bought ours as well. I've lived in trailer parks where I'd swear there was a black X painted on the roof. And, twice, I've been homeless. My wallet with never less than five-hundred dollars in it and raising 'scrounge' to a fine art. I've lived in supreme excess and survived far less. We muddled through. There is now an appreciation in knowing (not expecting) the bills can all be paid and in saving for the special vacations. There is something to be said for that working toward that I missed when younger and everything magically fell into my lap. Merlin, it seems, has kept his eye on those whom Camelot has blessed. And so, life circles back to stories. I collect them. Bits and pieces of stories litter bookshelves and whatnots, gather dust on my antique school master's desk, and scatter their magic upon whoever will listen. Elizabeth's emerald gown, Jan-Michael's gnarled walking stick, Dicken's scribbles, and Karen's letters. Katherine's letter opener, and Kathy's 1789 oversized and teensy-printed Shakespear. Beyond mere things, myriad tales of impossible nights and improbable days, glorious adventures, and dubious wanderings. Fairy tales and yes, happy endings. Snowglobe moments and freeze-frame ecstacies. A favored song for intrinsic reasons or a lamb's wool jacket lost in time. For ultimately we each are but our own anthology. And in that is our wealth and our legacy, and two pair of well-worn shoes |