Love at the Edge of Loss

I awoke this bright, sunny morning of my 58th birthday, feeling extraordinarily lucky and loved.  Facebook birthday greetings came chiming in. Beret brought me coffee, toast, brie, and the Times in bed.  The cat clamored for attention.  My daughter Paige WhatsApped from her Peace Corps posting in Panama.  I am warm, dry, safe, fed, loved.

Still, as I’ve contemplated the arrival of my birthday over the past week, and inevitably the year gone by, the song that’s been rattling around my heart is the Mark Knopfler/Emmylou Harris duet “If This Is Goodbye.”  Their album’s been in among the CDs in my car for about a month, and instead of getting progressively sick of it I’ve found myself obsessively homing in — until last week, driving home from a particularly exhausting divorce mediation, I had to pull over at the tourist lookout on the highway leading into my town, turn it up loud, and weep.  For basically no reason.

Or perhaps, for many reasons.  I’m coming to the end of the year of grieving my mother’s death – my siblings and I are going to Virginia next week to place her ashes.  Her last few days were spent in hospice in my house, after she’d announced her firm wish not to recover from her stroke.   And so, there was leave-taking before she went, and on another plane, there’s been more leave-taking since.

Then there’s what I do for a living.  The accumulated sorrow of mediating five to ten domestic relations cases a week does add up at times.

One can add the ignominy of our politics and culture, whose machines goad us to despise each others’ distended shadows, muffling our human cries, uttered just beyond view.

And finally, there is the suffering of the planet itself.  The new IPCC report on climate change brooks no poetry and accepts no apology.  It stands as a damnation of any of the puny works or professed values of the Boomer generation against the tidal judgment of the future.

What a depressing litany, right?   But when I think of these things, I actually don’t get sucked into sorrow.  When I wept on the highway, my deepest feeling was a pang of sweet appreciation.  Not that I lost my mother, but that I was with her at the end.  Not that there is marital carnage around me all the time, but that my own love, after 34 years, is still so tender.  Not that our democracy is so horribly imperiled, but that a surge of new voters could, just maybe, transform it.

After I developed epilepsy a few years ago, I came to manage the anxiety that my consciousness could be drastically altered at any moment, in the blink of an eye.  But it also taught me to live in the moment in a way no amount of philosophy could.  Beauty sprang out at me from ordinary places.  Now that my seizures are fully controlled, I still try to cultivate that awareness.  And at 58, living with an awareness of loss is easy to do.  Friends around me lose parents, partners, and – most excruciatingly – children; battle illness; endure separation; and go through all manner of other trials.  My birthday riches are sweetened by being at edge of — and surrounded by the brimming love attending — these other losses. They mirror our generation’s place in the world, and in history.

So here’s a duet from Mark and Emmylou.  I didn’t know until I sat down to write today that he composed it in memory of another bright fall morning – September 11.   Enjoy!

And, since Mark’s singing in particular is maddeningly indistinct in this version, here are the lyrics:

My famous last words
Are laying around in tatters
Sounding absurd
Whatever I try
But I love you
And that’s all that really matters
If this is goodbye
If this is goodbye

Your bright shining sun
Would light up the way before me
You were the one
Made me feel I could fly
And I love you
Whatever is waiting for me
If this is goodbye
If this is goodbye

Who knows how long we’ve got
Or what were made out of
Who knows if there’s a plan or not
There is our love
I know there is our love

My famous last words
Could never tell the story
Spinning unheard
In the dark of the sky
But I love you
And this is our glory
If this is goodbye
If this is goodbye

Me, Two

In the “where were you during the Kavanaugh hearings” sweepstakes, I’ll have a unique entry: sitting in our AirBnB in Chiapas, Mexico, clawing like a crazed rodent at the crappy signal on my iPhone.  The Mayan cybergods did grant me a short window to watch Dr. Ford’s testimony, and to profoundly identify with her story.  But my reactions did not end there.  There are things about Judge Kavanaugh’s story too that paradoxically resonate with mine.

First, Dr. Ford’s story.  For her imprecise surrounding details, my shrouds of misty memory clouding that bright summer when I was five.  For her sudden island of crisply focused memory as she climbed the stairs and was pushed into the side bedroom, an itinerant gardener’s invitation for me to enter the little shed in our side yard. For her noise of the turned-up stereo, my smell of potting soil and spiders.  For the hand smothering her mouth, the wood grain of the workbench a half-inch from my eyes, the press of it against my cheek and nose, just before the blinding pain.  For the ring in her ears of the boys’ uproarious laughter, the man’s voice warning me not to tell anyone about our “little game.”  For her decades-later need to build a second front door, my angry run-ins with the gardeners I’ve hired, those few times I’ve brought myself to hire them at all.

Beyond this wrench of recognition, I took in the hearings with the weary disgust I imagine I share with other survivors, as yet another public man’s private abuse comes to public exposure.  While some predations were open secrets committed by powerful brutes, other deeds were truly concealed, done by men of outward virtue, progressive champions, people whom “you’d never think would do it.”  When exposed, like Judge Kavanaugh, they advance the principal defense of their outward “good character”, evidenced by the belief among those around them that they are incapable of such crimes.

I don’t believe it for a second.  For there is a third layer of experience I felt watching the Kavanaugh hearings, that is perhaps less common.  Mixed with my fury and disgust, there lurks in me a sad understanding of Kavanaugh’s cornered rage.  I think he suffers from a pathological case of one of the more common traits of the male psyche: the divided self.  I know something about this.  Although I’ve done none of the deeds of which he, or any of the other parade of recent perpetrators, have committed, I’ve lived with the pain of a split psyche for much of my life.

In my case, it was the trauma of the rape that did it.  The manipulative bastard who cleaved my little body also cleaved my young mind.  From that moment forward, I was not one person.  I was the sweet boy who remained innocent, who got good grades, was never angry, and remembered nothing.  And I was the angry, ashamed boy with dark thoughts, whom nobody knew.  As the years went on, my selves grew more distant still.

I’m no psychologist, but I can see less extreme variants of this divided male self all around me, not necessarily induced by trauma.  Boys are routinely shamed into rigid gender roles at very young ages.  Whereas girls are now encouraged into a broad spectrum of healthy gender manifestations, boys too often are forced to confront a narrow path of masculinity, from which deviation is punished and ridiculed.  Those aspects of the self which do not conform – perhaps, the feminine aspects of one’s personality that cannot be owned — are hidden, rejected, despised.  And a host of institutions, from the Catholic Church on down, offer prayers, rituals, codes, societies, sects, and traditions, to bring the “good” to light and keep the “bad” in shadow.

When threatened with exposure, the controlling, outward self will fight tooth and nail, because he perceives his survival to be at stake. Not only the survival of his career, or reputation, but of his core. I know something about this too.  A major obstacle to my recovery of the memory of my abuse was the tight grip my outward self kept on the explosive rage inside me, and the fear that if I let go I would be annihilated. I was nearly thirty before I finally broke through.  And I would be over fifty before I finally excavated down to the crucial memory, of a bathroom in the basement of my childhood home right after the rape.  I remembered standing there, looking in the mirror, and thinking, What do I do now?

In that desperate moment, a separate me emerged.  It was as though another boy was standing next to me, looking at me sorrowfully. A voice, that said, Give it to me. I’ll take it. And then vanishing like a woodland deer.  I don’t remember knowing what “it” was, but somehow I felt I could cope. And so I did.  I went on being the good boy who must at all costs remain blameless, and not remember. And my disappeared twin went on being the bad one, who must have done something to deserve what had happened.

Until finally, in my decades-later moment of remembrance of that moment in the basement, the wall between my two selves collapsed. From that time forward, I have no longer been two.  I have been one.   As a single self, I have felt a power, and a love, that up to that point had been denied me.

So now I am trying to hold some love and compassion for Brett Kavanaugh, and for those scared, brittle, fulminating old men who surround him.  Not for the damage they have done, nor for the decades of damage they will do if they succeed in embedding their poisonous brand of denial into our Supreme Court.  But for the struggle they would face – and the true public service they could do — if they were ever to move beyond their fear.

Islands in the Storm

24 years ago this October, my wife Beret and I were living on the Micronesian island of Saipan, waiting for Category 4 Typhoon Wilda to make landfall.  Everyone had hunkered down and stocked up on spam and beer.   Our windows featured “typhoon glass” rated to 150 mph; but predicted gusts were higher than that, and there was a huge spreading tree just outside our apartment, with branches liable to come through the living room window if it toppled.  I figured we’d move to the back bedroom if that happened, or, worst case if all hell broke loose, the bathroom.  Just before the power went out, CNN International announced: There’s a big typhoon out in the western Pacific, but it isn’t threatening any populated areas.

Excuse me? I sputtered. Wilda was on a direct track to whack us in 12 hours.  So we waited.  Our daughter Paige, not yet 2, tottered around the dim rooms in her batik-print gecko dress, babbling the new syllables she had just learned: ty-FOO. The living room window bowed against a strong gust.  Beret suggested we move into the bathroom.

I was reminded of that experience last week, as the US media whirled incessantly about the possible storm track of Hurricane Florence, still days away from arrival, while at that same moment 217,000 US citizens on Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands were bearing the brunt of Category 4 Typhoon Mangkhut, completely unnoticed.   “We are now in Typhoon Condition I,” my friend Cinta Kaipat posted on Facebook last weekend from Saipan.  “Pray for us.”

We should do more than pray.  We should remember that the storms we rightly worry over when they hit our shores — and whose climate-change-fueled intensity owes largely to our own carbon-consuming profligacy – are far more lethal when they hit less-developed places.  On Saipan, locals admonished us to stay indoors during typhoons, not just for the reasons you’d do so in the US, but also because houses built of corrugated tin turn into flying guillotines.  When Donald Trump dismissed the official death toll from Hurricane Maria – statements that must have felt to Puerto Ricans like utterances of Holocaust denial — he showed no concept of what would make Maria so much more deadly than a hurricane on the mainland.  The average Puerto Rican household went 84 days without electricity, 68 days without water, and 41 days without cellphone coverage after Maria.  People couldn’t get necessary medicines or reach hospitals. On the mainland, you can travel to an unaffected area, get away, or get help.  The seriously ill can be moved to a place with power to run their life support equipment. But on an island, there’s nowhere to go.  And so, a lot more islanders died.  The death rate went from 8.8 per thousand before the storm to 14.3 per thousand afterwards.

In days of yore, a major disaster in a developing country would engender an outpouring of international aid, led by the US and a host of multinational agencies.  Now, we are failing even to provide adequate storm recovery assistance to US “possessions” – that strange euphemism for our neo-colonial empire — the Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, or the Marianas.  For foreign countries the coffers are mighty shallow; the USAID Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance has a budget of only $1 billion to address a panoply of disasters worldwide.

As a matter of global environmental justice, this isn’t nearly enough, especially when you consider that the people who have contributed the least to the atmospheric carbon causing these superstorms and rising sea levels stand to lose the most — in some cases, to lose everything — from them.

So when a truly catastrophic storm — like Hurricane Mitch, which killed 11,000 Central Americans in 1998 – devastates another country to the point that it is unable to support its population, a wave of migration occurs.  Those whom we fail to aid will end up coming to us, seeking refuge and new life.  As storms intensify and sea levels rise, our national borders will become soaked and diaphanous with suffering.

Back 24 years ago, Typhoon Wilda decided not to smack us after all – it stalled menacingly off Saipan’s shores for a few hours, and then veered away.  Another bullet dodged.  Last week, Mangkhut too tracked south and largely spared Saipan on its way to the Philippines.  The neighboring island of Rota, a tropical gem where the islanders traditionally survived typhoons in caves, took the biggest hit.  The game of roulette goes on; one place gets lucky, another gets nailed, with the stakes a little higher each time.  But as the planet warms, in the end we’re all islanders.  And there’s really no place to go.