Mix-tape Mirage

He’s so frail now. It’s almost hard to find the summertime in him these days.

My dad is in his eighties, and it feels more correct to call him father to match the distinguished white of his beard and what is left of his hair.

Memories of the younger version of him seem somehow stretched, thin and lean like his aging muscles over his shrinking frame. He sits hunched on the edge of his seat, wavering slowly side to side. It’s as though his spine can no longer hold him still. “You must have lost weight,” he barks at me snappishly. I’ve jut hiked up my jeans for the third time since entering the kitchenette where he sits with an untouched cup of tea. His peevish attitude is the only thing about him that has grown with time. Instead of starting a fight with the response that barrages my lips, stop talking about my weight… what the hell is wrong with you! I just roll my eyes and smile mischievously, “nope, just forgot to pack a belt this time.”

He’s right. I have lost weight, intentionally. Knowing I would be home with him and my mom for a week I’d spent the previous month shedding a couple of pounds to try and keep body commentary at bay. Of course, I should have known it was in vain. That kind of open-minded change must be intentional. No one accidentally becomes more compassionate.

“Huh,” he grumbles and stares off into the air again. His attention is short and more often than not in between moments of conversation his mind wanders internally, and he stares slack jawed at nothing.

I look around the kitchen to pass the incoherent time. The blinds are shut across the entire house, windows closed tightly and with no lights on, the dim atmosphere weighs on me and I can hardly breathe. My childhood home feels unfamiliar and foreign, even with my dad sitting 4 feet from me and my mom fluttering about the kitchen slowly clearing plates from the counter. I stare at him a moment longer until suddenly I can’t stand it anymore.

Jumping to my feet, I race down a few steps to the family room, throwing up the blinds and heaving open the lower patio door. As air and light begin to pour in, I smell the sweet, dank smell of freshly cut grass. Dashing up the steps I peel back the upper patio door and pry up the kitchen windows and blinds. The sounds of squirrels scampering around the old aspen, which has grown bigger than our old house and homes fat little birds chattering amongst themselves in its branches, erupts while I catch the distinct waft of mineral packed soil. Somewhere in the neighborhood kids are screaming with glee and a dog is barking wildly. A lawn is being mowed with a gas-powered roaring machine, and an old man plays hacky sack in the park behind the house. A neighbor is turning her flowerpots to help the flowers catch the best of the bright morning light.

 The house is filled instantly with sounds, scents and sun.

And right before my eyes a mirage forms like rewinding a vhs tape.

My dad is unfurling from his blank faced, wizened perch into a confident stance, leaning on the back of his chair with strong, weathered hands. His black skin is stretched taut over the kind of biceps that come from a lifetime of blue-collar labor; his calves are shaped and tensed covered with scars from an epic incident involving me and learning to ride a bike. He’s wearing shorts and a white tank top covering a slightly puffy gut. The early morning sun is still a spotlight through the window, and I can see a bead of sweat on his brow and he’s peering intently out of the patio doors.

The house around me is young again even with the old worn linoleum floors and beige walls. There are vases of fresh summer flowers on the kitchen counter and barbies and books scattered on the floor in the family room. My swim bag is sitting by the back door, and I can smell the chlorine wafting up to where I stand. Light is everywhere. My childhood home is bathed in sunlight from windows on every wall and the wall of glass doors in the main living area. It’s glowing. As if on que the murky mirage solidifies sight, sound and light, and in my minds eye I hit PLAY.

It’s Colorado summer in the 90s. Bright blue cloudless sky, soaring heat index and the beginning of what would become a prolonged and fateful drought. Sitting in the middle of the suburbs with no air conditioning, school out and 4 irritable and energetic kids milling about the house, my dad is counting the minutes until summer museum classes start. Then he can have space and time back to continue tinkering on his 1985 red Ford pickup and retrofitting his 87 Ford Econoline van with parts and pieces to make it better for long distance travel. My dad always loves working with his hands and summer is his time to put manual labor into and tinker on his 3 cars. I love helping him in the garage, handling tools, holding the work light or fitting my small hand in the hard-to-reach engine places. Something about getting dirty and greasy under the hood of a car feels meaningful to me. Hindsight will help me see it was the time with him while learning to work with my hands that gave me the joy.

“You wanna go to Bandimere?” His eyes flicker in my direction. I’m ten years old, standing in the kitchen with a plastic cup of Tang, positively buzzing with morning energy. Everyone else is still upstairs slowly shifting around and preparing to start the day. I literally jump in the air and squeal, “YEAH!” As my bounding continues, he looks at his watch, “go tell your sister, I need to check the spark plugs on the car.” Swiping his coffee off the octagon shaped table he saunters to the back door and disappears into the garage. It’s 8 o’clock but I can already feel the heat of the day warming the floors and the dry heat heaving into the house. On days like this, when you knew it was going to be helter swelter with no relief, you take a breath and head out. If you can’t beat it, join in.

My middle sister is 2 years older than me, and in our pre pre-teen years we retain the idle and simple essence of summer joy. Bare feet on hot sidewalks, skinned knees, hands and chins, splinters in our toes and heels from the unfinished wood of the back deck; sleeping on the floor to stay cool, and blowing bubbles, hopscotch chalk on the driveway, roller skates and jump rope. But what I love more than anything, is going to Bandimere Speedway.

Mom packs an old school picnic basket with sandwiches, chips, pickles, and frozen grapes. She makes a pitcher full of watermelon lemonade and stacks some Capri sun next to her Arbor Mist in the Igloo cooler. She chides me on my outfit choice, jumper shorts are not the best option for a day of port-o-potties and sitting on hot concrete slabs, but I hold firm to my black and yellow striped romper.

We take the Pontiac and cruise to 470 to enter from the South. My heart always leaps to my throat on the drive. Gliding from the flat plains, you reach a small gully and pockets of thin trees and small man-made lakes until just before your eyes Mt Evans towers over you and slightly to her left large red cliffs emerge in majesty. Just below the crimson ridgeline sits a quarter mile dragstrip fondly called Thunder Mountain. And she is as summer to me as heat, sandals, and sunburns.

We always arrive early enough to pick out the good seats. Too close and you’ll be consumed with sound and smoke, but too far and you can’t see the car liveries clearly. My mom and sister begin setting up blankets and picnic items but as soon as we find the spot, I dash down the stairs to ogle the cars up close. I feel the heat from the track resonating and the pungent smell of hot tar stinging in my nostrils. And I love it. My mom orders my dad to follow me, knowing that I will stand with my fingers entwined in the metal gate until my lungs burn and my eyes are raw. He stands next to me diligently answering as I ask about the cars makes, models and speeds. When he can’t hear me over the roaring engines, and when the announcer cautions that racing will commence, he peels me away back to our spot.

There are vendors, games, fair rides, and food further away from the track side. My sister and I investigate the options to escape the parents from time to time and kill some of the youthful energy built up, like lactic acid in our muscles. But nothing outside of the track holds my attention long. Inevitably I am drawn back to the strip where I can feel the rumbling of the powerful machines below in the cavity of my chest, replacing my heartbeat with a mechanical engine throb.

I poke my dad as a souped out silver Mustang with a hood scoop drives up to the line next to a 1989 Firebird. “I’ll bet you $5 that the Firebird will win!” I spit and My dad chuckles, “When did you start gambling?” The mustang engine roars and dusts its wheels, kicking up a cloud of thick smoke into the stands. “I doubt they’ll even get the thing started.” He pauses, “I think the Mustang is going to win this one sweetheart.” The firebird engine sputters in and out a few times over the next few minutes. He looks down at me, “You really like the underdogs, don’t you?” I nod, transfixed on the unassuming black car I’d bet my weekly allowance on.

The engine roars to life and the racing lights flash on, I hold my breath and clench my fists as it hits green. Both cars scream off the line in unison. Most of the crowd is paying half attention, waiting for the super sports cars to come out and play later in the day. There is no cheering or vocal excitement, just idle chit chat and some loud laughter in the background. My eyes never leave the Firebird as it picks up speed rapidly and squeals down the raceway leaving a trail of dark lines on the track surface. I can see faint trails of smoke emerging from the hood and worry if I blink it will explode.

My dad hands me a 5-dollar bill with a proud grin on his face, “when you believe in something, stick to it baby girl.” A small group near the track whoops and hollers as the firebird disappears on the far end of the track, it barely edged out the Mustang with a late surge. As I tuck my winnings into my green and purple dinosaur fanny pack a red Ferrari rolls across the starting line, jumping its engine to life. The announcer mumbles something over the loudspeaker about false starts but I stare out down the track wondering what it would be like to go that fast in such a giant machine of moving parts.

We spend all day at the track, waiting for the sweet relief of sun cover when it dips below the peaks to our backs. Once in the shade, sweatshirts and cardigans emerge from a random bag my mom has stashed at our station. Dry heat requires the sun to retain its bite. Once the sun slips behind clouds, buildings, trees or mountains, the temperature always drops dramatically. I tuck under my dad’s arm and pepper him with questions about the innerworkings of car mechanisms. He diligently answers and admits where his knowledge ends, “you’ll have to look that up in our book on car engines when we get home, I’m not sure how you would do that…” He responds to my inquiry about hooking up nitrous to a 70s trans am sitting on the side of the track.

The races come to an end just before headlights became mandatory, and I can no longer hide my yawns between splits. But the top fuel pulls up to the line and my little heart stops. The 7000-horsepower dragster literally shoots fire from its back end and lights up the dark blue of the evening like the fourth of July. It is beautiful. Like a moth, I find myself pulled toward it, dashing down the stone steps to get to the gate before others could block my close-up view. My dad follows enough to keep me in sight. Standing with my face pressed to the gate I worry the heat emanating from the engine will burn my face, I can feel a tinge of pain in my cheeks. A girl next to me gasps and jumps away screaming, “sparks!” With a collection of yells, most of the younger kids run away from the gate back to the safety of their parents.

Dad steps up behind me and points to the engine sitting in the back. I can’t hear if he is speaking to me or not. I can barely hear, see, think or feel anything except for that dragster. It is heat, light, and sound incarnate. When the light turns green with a supercharged flash of heat and a rocket ship of sound, its gone. I don’t even see the wheels turn. It just flies down the track and disappears into the gathering dark.  

With a mix tape my sister and I made off Radio Disney playing in the tape deck and the mountains receding like a shadowy cloak draped behind a sea of stars we make our way back to fields of city lights. “Dad, what’s your favorite car?” I pipe up to break the sleepy silence and lean on the back of the brown bench seats of the Pontiac. “I think I like Thunderbird!” He chuckles, “we’ll see about that when its time for your first car. I don’t know that I have a favorite, I really like my truck.” There is a grease stain on my romper from earlier in the week when I’d helped him change the oil, and I rub it with my thumb subconsciously. “When you are able to fix and work on your own car that makes you respect it more.” I half-listen and roll down my window to stick my hand into the night air. It’s cool and crisp with a light breeze rustling the tree lined streets of our neighborhood. I can smell charcoal grills and hear the hushed voices and laughter hidden behind fences and gates. Next door a small fire flickers in their pit at we pulled into our driveway.

As my mom unlocks the front door, I kick off my jelly sandals and race to the patio doors, poised to lull my sister down the deck steps to lay in the cool grass and look for shooting stars. But the mirage begins to fuzz the edges of the living memory, with the night wafting away and morning light returning. Our blue and white linoleum kitchen floor turn back into beige tile and the green granite countertops reappear. The walls papered with poorly executed works of kid art fade and family photos and works of professional art emerge. Our home grows into a house, with dulled edges and comfort borne from years of loving wear.  

The mirage blur begins to recede, and with a blink I’m standing across the table from my dad seated, stooped, and blinking slowly and blankly.  

“So, dad, what are you planning to do today?” I ask with a cheerfulness that I no longer feel. “Well…” he mumbles around a bit and taps on the table with a bony finger, “I need to take that car in for service.” He ponders his prized Mercedes, purchased brand new 5 years ago. “But I just don’t feel like it.” He looked at me and smiled tiredly, “You need anything?” I shook my head. I don’t have the heart to remind him that the car is falling apart, with multiple part replacements needed and no one to care for it like he would have so many summers ago.

I watch him shuffle away from the table down three steps into his office on the landing, shutting the door behind him while absently muttering to himself.

And I am left wondering where summertime has gone.

A Little More

If I could make a wish for you
it would be a desperately simply one

I wish that you would assault the commonplace

maybe take part of it,
internalize it
create within yourself
nerves of steel
and bold courage
but leave the heart tender and soft

With the other part
I wish you would go out in the world
and not be meek and mild
not turn your cameras eye on yourself
but face the world around you
make something, feel something
about the things you see
the people you encounter

I wish you would take it
break it
remake it
and give it to someone else
to remake
yet again

I wish you would know that
this world
this life
is absolutely yours

as terrible, horrifying,
as it can be
you have every inch of space you need
to
make it
better.

Discover Challenge: Radical Authenticity

I used to think I was a liar.

One night, I sat on the bed, while the children I was nanny-ing snuggled under the quilts. I wove story after story trying to lull them to sleep, weaving words like the braids in the little girls’ hair.

Before she drifted off the littlest one told me, “I like stories made from nothing.”

My stories take a tiny grain of truth and create a giant bean stalk where a small weed would be.

As a teen, that often turned into ways to disguise the truth from my parents.

But maybe it’s what makes me, me.

via Discover Challenge: Radical Authenticity

6 sentences to make a story

Stumbled on this challenge from any1mark66
6 word stories
Prompt: Star

She sat next to him, feeling the cool breeze blowing salty scents off the Bosphorus and watching the twinkling stars. He was feeding a stray cat orange slices with gentle hands. She ran a hand down his back, rubbing her palm along his spine, “It’s such a quiet night”. The silence between them tightened, except for the lapping of waves against concrete. She shivered and pulled the cardigan closer around her shoulders, “Let’s head back home soon ,yeah?”. His reply was curt, “I’m leaving you.”

Link it up and check out others Here

Time to Travel

To my fellow book-lovers out there…

THE BOOKISH TIME TRAVEL TAG

Thanks to English Lit Geek for sharing this. I wasn’t tagged, but I couldn’t help but throw my twopence in.

Rules:

•Answer as many of the questions as you can/want.
•Tag other people – as many as you like. Share the love!
•Please leave a link to this post/blog.
•Tag the post as “Bookish Time Travel”.
•Feel free to leave a link to your post in the contact form!
•Explore! Try and visit other people’s Bookish Time Travel posts and leave a comment.

1. What is your favorite historical setting for a book?

temp
12th century. The Catholic Church was consolidating its power and is becoming more intolerant of any beliefs outside its standard. Western Europe is a collection of small towns and royal warlords, the far east is essentially the production capital of the world. The Middle East is the center of culture and learning. A fascinating complex time!

 

 

 

2. What writer/s would you like to travel back in time to meet?

Homer- The Odyssey was such a seminal work for me. It encompassed so much feeling, and morality, lessons wrapped in adventure. It is the original adventure story of history. I would love to just listen to his stories, which are half speech, have poetry reading, with a sprinkling of diatribe.

T.H. White— The Once and Future King opened my eyes to the humor in a life changing adventure, and how important it is to add life to your drama, no matter how simple or complex. He took a tried and true story, and wove it into a tapestry. Beautiful work. I feel like talking with him would be like having drinks with an old friend who tells tall tales in the most interesting way.

 

3. What book/s would you travel back in time and give to your younger self?

I don’t think there are any books I’ve read at a “wrong time” in my life. Every book i’ve read along the way had affected me where I was. Hindsight would tell me maybe to not waste my youth on so many Goosebumps books, but it was essential for the creation of my super creepy imaginary friends…. So I think I’d leave my younger self alone, her nose was always buried in a book and I’m satisfied with that.

4. What book/s would you travel forward in time and give to your older self?

Kelsey’s Raven by Sylvia Peck- I hope to re-visit that when I’m older

5. What is your favorite futuristic setting from a book?

Airborn by Kenneth Oppel is an incredible book (the first in a series) set in a steampunk-esque future with airships, and dragon-like creatures that roam the skies. It is a look at a future without the dystopian leaning.

6. What is your favorite book that is set in a different time period (can be historical or futuristic)?

Can’t do it… i can’t narrow down. Historical Fiction is my favorite genre so I can’t pick a favorite.

7. Spoiler Time: Do you ever skip ahead to the end of a book just to see what happens?

No.  But sometimes I won’t read the end if I think I can’t handle the loss.

8. If you had a Time Turner, where would you go and what would you do?

I would go into the future, maybe 200 years, and do a social study on how people interact, have the various ethnicity’s and religions finally reached a point of peace? How does society function? It would be neat to see a world where hate and ignorance aren’t constant obstacles, and I would hope to travel to a time where that happens.

9. Favorite book (if you have one) that includes time travel or takes place in multiple time periods?

Caroline B Cooney  wrote a series of young adult books The Time Travelers Quartet that I read because my sister had them on her bookshelf and I had already read everything on mine. They were sentimental and romantic, which drew me in.

I don’t typically enjoy time traveling novels, because to me there is so much to work with withing one period of time, and sometimes the plot gets too convoluted…and with the breadth there seems a loss of depth.

10. What book/series do you wish you could go back and read again for the first time?

Bartimaeus trilogy by Jonathan Stroud- It was such a dark, twisting book where for the first time a main character doesn’t grow to become a hero, but a villain of sorts, and the story is told from the perspective of an unwilling hero. Set in an alternate history with magical oligarchs, it imitates 18th century Europe.  I can’t remember reading the books, because I felt as if I was there. 

 

 

The best part of any challenge is the people you get to tag, and the following are great blogs that I enjoy reading

Tagged Challengers:

PHILESSATRY

MOTHER WILLOW

MY VALIANT SOUL

MY ENDURING BONES

~ A Writer’s Notebook

A Map to the Stars

I stood on the balcony
breathing in the mist,
hovering on the cusp of stepping
back into that
stuffy hotel room.

The air in there was too
pale and stale.

The beauty of being
on the road again
after so long with my feet buried in
fertile soil, had
filled me with
such apprehensive joy.

Charting a new path for yourself
is like being given
a map to the stars
endless boundless opportunities
to explore
jumping from exploding white dwarf
to the next
metallic blue mass.

As soon as I am comfortable
gravity pulls at my
soul
and I have to pound pavement
for solace

But in that stuffy hotel room
with my traveling comrade

I felt a longing
for the one who
knows my heart

at home.

Rear Window

There is a curious orange tabby that sits in the bay window of the house across the street.
He’s perched on the back of what appears to be a beige love-seat.

I am eternally grateful that no human can speak his language because the stories
he could sing on me would make any modest being blush.

I don’t close my blinds much, I’ve never felt the need.
My true north home, back in Colorado had a large maple tree with flaking bark guarding my window from one direction and overgrown evergreen bushes flanking the other.
I was safe in a cocoon of invisibility, even with the blinds flung wide open.

Besides that, I am regrettably a sunflower(and moon-flower) I wither when either isn’t shining its glory down on me.

So little tabby in the window knows all about the tattoo on the skin stretching over my rib,that my mother has yet to see.
And the scars on my back from skin infections of my youth.

He’s seen drunken stupor passion and sober fights between me and my sometimes live-in partner.

He has seen me collapse in tears on my plush little sofa, and dance wildly to the songs that scream my heart….

He’s seen so much with his perceptive cat eyes.

Yesterday I passed by him outside lounging in the sun. He didn’t move,or open his eyes.

He doesn’t know me at all.

Lost Wallet

It was probably about 12 degrees Fahrenheit outside (Which he would note as -11C)

and snow was piled on top of my car, crisp and inviting,
like the snowbanks in my hometown.
I love to crunch my fingers down into the white abyss
and pack it up into an ice-ball, or blow it into a flurry of flakes.
(Which one depends on the wetness of the snow)

Of course I was panicking.
not the cute panicking where the cheeks flush,
and the hair looks windswept as you circle around
searching your thoughts
and the purse,
and under the car seat.

No I was fully panicking,
with the angry slamming of my empty beer glass
on the table top
and rolling my eyes at the server
when they tell me to have a nice day
the stomping to the car and throwing everything from under the seat out onto
the sidewalk

and he was quiet
“it’s probably in the parking lot”

I sucked in sharply,
“yah right, it’s gone.”
“Fuck!”

He drove me through the drifts,
knowledgeably navigating the Columbus streets

We arrived at my car

a little black wallet sat peaceably in the snow

He brushed off the windshield
and told me to start my car

I thought back to something he’d said
at the table

back before I realized my wallet wasn’t under the piles of receipts,
mittens, tissues, scarves and junk
in my purse

when I’d confessed that
I don’t talk about my writing
because people don’t listen
but when you don’t talk about something
it doesn’t’ feel real

and then I’d apologized.

because you learn to apologize
when you are a listener
conversing with talkers,
you apologize for filling the air
they’d rather fill themselves.

and he’d stopped me.
“don’t apologize”
“fuck ’em,”
“you can talk about
whatever you want to”

He said it will all the confidence
I’d never had
and all the sincerity
I needed to hear