ROW V. WAVE

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Slam… Slam… Slam…

They say ten-foot waves are manageable… if they don’t hit too fast. But they’re every 8 seconds. I check the weather constantly. My daughter (26) and three female teammates are rowing from California to Hawaii.

“Breathe,” I tell myself. “She’s living her dream. It’s her choice.”

If the boat gets overturned, it’s supposed to right itself. But will it? They re-balance the load to rock, not roll.

The boat stays up. Their rights get overturned.

They say the hardest thing is the nausea, but they don’t let it stop them. This is their mantra:

“Puke and Rally.”

A young woman pondering her journey ahead across the PAcific Ocean

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We Existed

A hillside of redwood trees, some fallen, some scorched but still standing, and some just a few feet tall.

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1990: “Please…?” the reporter said. “People think it’s just San Francisco and New York.”

Trembling, I said, “OK.”

Why? Because…we existed. Everywhere.

2021: “Let the Record Show” — a 736-page oral history of ACT UP NY — has 188 interviews with former members, and zero HIV+ women.

The author acknowledges it. Reviewers don’t. Like we never existed.

We did. We do.

I started an A-Z list of long-term survivors: Alice, Beatrice, Cecilia, Dawn, Elaine, Fiona, Gina, Hulda… Then another: Alejandra, Billie, Claire… Antigone, Betsy, Carrie…

Then allies: Allie, Barb, Chris, Dan…

I stop. Remember other lists. Breathe.

Surviving is beautiful, but bittersweet.

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Extraordinary Measures

Sunlight filtering down through the branches of a redwood tree

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“She probably won’t make it,” the doctor said, when I was born. “If she does, she might not be ‘quite right’.”

According to my mother, she told him, “Then don’t take any extraordinary measures.”

Four strangers—who did take extraordinary measures—saved my life. What was it like? Watching their blood flow into a newborn in an incubator, knowing she could still die? I don’t even know their names. To pay it forward, my dad donated blood the rest of his life.

Never forget: The world is full of anonymous heroes. The darker it gets, the more candles they light.

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Whose Choice?

In a photograph taken from the back of a crowd, a woman is speaking on a stage in front of Oakland’s Lake Merritt. Next to her, an ASL interpreter is signing. In the front row facing the speaker, four women in long, red, hooded capes are sitting together, listening.

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“Whose choice?”

“Our choice!”

Oakland’s chanting swells to a roar. 

“WHOSE choice??”

“OUR choice!!”

The rage feels… reverent… protective… maternal. 

A gray-haired woman speaks: “I was 17… friends collected money… abortion was illegal… I was blindfolded … a lock clicked… somebody said, ‘You’re a sinner’…” 

A young woman trembles: “I’ve never told anyone… He raped me… demanded I keep it… it was legal… they were kind… I told him I miscarried… he went ballistic…”

A child in a tutu shows me her sign—“Don’t be mean!”—dotted with unicorns.

I smile back. “I love unicorns, too.” 

We’re here for her.

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River of Time

Two women standing with their bodies touching, smiling at a camera phone (not shown) for a “selfie”. The older woman has grey hair and a floral scarf, and looks curious. Her daughter, with short brown hair, red glasses, and a blue sweatshirt is taking the picture.

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Long ago, I was the fish, meandering currents of knowing and unknowing. Knowing her rhythms: lub-dub, lub-dub, rocking, rest. Knowing her voice. Not yet knowing how much joy and sorrow would pass between us. 

Now she’s the fish, being swept along. Knowing she’s Margo. Not knowing our names. Not knowing she’s 94. 

She drinks water, sits and thinks, then brings the empty glass to her lips: “Thanks for calling. It was nice to talk to you.” 

Later, her gnarled hands glide up and down the piano, remembering things her mind cannot. She stares at “Edelweiss,” and plays “Climb Every Mountain.”

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Addicted to Words

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“Marriage is hot,” I tell my husband. “Sex is super hot.”

“How about balls?”

“Sorry,” I say. “Balls are frigid.”

I’m addicted to Pimantle (and Wordle, Quordle, Octordle, Semantle, and Scrabble). It’s like playing Marco Polo, only with words (like “ghost” or “furniture”). The warmer you get, the closer you are to guessing. I dismissed the Reddit reviewer’s warning: “Hate this game. Pretty sure I’ll play it every day.” Now I’m hooked, too.

Is it “queer”? Three flames means I’m 8 words away! How about “gay”?

The app rejoices: “You did it! Flameo, Hotman!”

Dopamine! So sweet. Until it’s gone.

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The Meaning of Easter

A basket of eggs elaborately decorated with hearts, flowers, and animals.

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On Easter morning, as breakfast wound down and the kids fidgeted in their booster seats admiring their as-yet-empty baskets, my Catholic mother-in-law decided it was time to teach them about the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus. It took a while, but she’s a great storyteller. They hung on every word.

“Three days later,” she said dramatically, “his friends went to the cave and discovered that big rock had been moved out of the way and… Guess what? He wasn’t there!”

They scrunched up their faces, thinking intently. Then one said, “So… is that cave where the bunny hid the eggs?”

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While We Were Out Walking

Photograph of an oak tree next to a path crossing the top of a bright green green hill on a sunny day, with Oakland and the bay barely visible in the background.

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My friend and I were hiking, talking about life and taking pictures of wildflowers, when we saw a frayed rope dangling from a tree.

I smiled. She didn’t. 

I saw a swing. She saw a noose. 

I’m white. She’s Black. This is our America. Everyone should get to feel safe, but I understand why she doesn’t.

In 232 years, 108 of 115 Supreme Court justices have been white men. How did that lack of diversity impact their decisions? 

My friend’s mother never got to see a Black woman on the Supreme Court, but she will. It’s progress we both welcome.

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Imagine, Commit, Prepare

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Zhoom… zhoom… zhoom… zhoom…

Next door, my 24-year old neighbor has been erging since 4 AM—2 hours on, 2 hours off—training to row a 4-woman boat (with my daughter) from SF to Honolulu.

She’ll stop after 14 hours (@100,000 meters). In June, when Title IX turns 50, they’ll row like that 24/7.

Their extensive preparations remind me of parenthood: imagine, commit, prepare, get support, manage what’s controllable, and accept what’s not.

  • Controllable: fitness; team-building; learning about safety, navigation, communications, rescue operations, desalinators; and organizing support (coaches, nutritionist, a weather navigator).
  • Uncontrollable: weather, waves, life.

Stay tuned.

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Braving the Thicket

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A wooden walkway, zigzagging through a thicket with buds on branches about to open up and light up ahead.

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Sometimes, when the world feels too heavy — prickly, erratic, unsafe, and infinitely inhumane — I retreat and hunker down in my cave, reading, writing, doomscrolling, and wishing things were different. Other times, I heed the call to venture out, to participate in the flow of life. That’s when I follow Mr. Rogers’ advice: “Look for the helpers.” Often, I discover that people I don’t even know have already scratched a passage through the thicket, so others can keep moving forward along their own, messy paths. I stop. Look. Breathe. Listen. There’s light up ahead, and all around are signs of spring. 

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California poppies in a meadow of blowing grasses overlooking the bay.
A purple Douglas Iris, still unfolding.
Purple shooting stars reaching towards the sky on hillside of spring grass.

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“She’ll Never Make It”

A high mountain lake bounded by snow on one side

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Backpacking for the first time at 19, I collapsed in a snowbank, soaked and exhausted, curled into a ball, and closed my eyes: I just need a little nap.

Drifting asleep, I pictured my ex-boyfriend smirking. He’d told my friend: “She’ll never make it.”

Asshole.

I forced myself awake, struggled to my feet, heaved on my pack, and kept going. 

The next morning, I watched a glorious sunrise from a mountaintop and gave thanks for the snarky comment that probably kept me from freezing to death. There’s nothing like being told, “You can’t,” to make someone say, “Really? Watch me.”

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“Where Do You Go to Church?”

Sunbeams lighting a trail through a redwood forest.

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Friend: Where do you go to church?

Me: Here.

Friend: No, I mean, where do you go to talk to God?

Me: Right here. I rarely talk to God…but God sometimes talks to me.

Friend: Why don’t you go to church?

Me: When I went to church, people told me I’d burn in hell. I was 5. When I’m here, God tells a different story.

Friend: What story does God tell you?

Me: God tells me to keep on loving everyone I can. The people focused on Hell — when there is so much loving to be done — are already there.

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Kissing

A soapstone sculpture of a mother nursing her child against a yellow and blue background.

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Prompt: 100 words about “kissing.” I struggled. I’m sorry.

2/28/22: “Kateryna Suharokova kisses her newborn son Makar in the basement of a maternity hospital converted into a medical ward and used as a bomb shelter in Mariupol, Ukraine.” (AP)

3/3/22: “A refugee kisses her daughter inside a tent at the Romanian-Ukrainian border.” (AP)

3/5/22: “I kissed the kids goodbye… I was the only one going the other way.” — Sergiy Stakhovsky (Sky News)

3/6/22: “His mother unfolds the blanket, gently touches her [18 month old] dead son’s cheek and kisses him.” (Sky News)

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Fiddler on a Roof

Sunflowers

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I was 11 when we moved into an aging farmhouse in the woods. That day, my brother climbed an apple tree onto the roof with his violin, and played the first two lines — lively, yet melancholy — from Fiddler on a Roof.

To our amazement, the next two lines echoed off the mountainside. Downstream, a stranger with a trumpet was welcoming us to the neighborhood. 

Let’s get to know THAT neighbor, I thought. (And we did.)

I’m thinking of Tevye today: “You may ask, ‘Why do we stay up there if it’s so dangerous?’ We stay because Anatevka is our home.”

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Child of the Universe

A starry night sky, framed by trees, with a quotation below from Desiderata, by Max Ehrmann: You are a child of the universe no less than the trees and the stars; you have a right to be here.

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“Fuck!”

I ran outside in my socks.

“I can’t take it anymore!” she screamed, hurling her phone at the pavement, then punching a telephone pole. 

“Excuse me, Ma’am. Can I help you?”

“I don’t know. Can you?”

She screamed about trees dying, gun violence, homelessness, her landlord, her mother… “I’m a worthless piece of shit.”

“You’re not.”

“What would you know about rejection?”

“I’m HIV-positive.” 

She stopped screaming. I quoted Desiderata: 

“You are a child of the universe

no less than the trees and the stars;

you have a right to be here.”

Then we held each other and wept.

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Murmurations

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I love watching wild clouds of shorebirds, a tumbling, swirling murmuration, as they disappear over there, then reappear unexpectedly nearby as undulating ribbons: a double helix.

I wish people could twist and turn, transform, that nimbly. Cars, too. But a zygote waits 30 hours before it splits in two. And yesterday, when that car appeared out of nowhere, we couldn’t move fast enough, and it couldn’t stop. 

I’m OK. Dan hit his head, but the ER doc says he’s ok, too. Our car is not. 

I’d rather watch a murmuration than be one…

Rather be a murmuration than be nothing.

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Vacations Can Be Hard for Gardeners

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Vacations are hard for gardeners. How could Dan leave Basil, at such a tender age? 

Gently cradling the tiny bambino, Dan said, “He’s coming with us.” 

We took turns driving 1,000 miles to Arches National Park. Seated on the dashboard, Basil was good company. He never fussed. Never said, “Are we there yet?” When Dan swerved to miss a jackrabbit, I caught Basil. When I slammed on the breaks, Dan lunged to protect him from the windshield. 

Basil survived the trip, and returned home two inches taller. 

After all that, I felt a little remorseful when we ate him.

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Govoritsi po Russki?

A view of Lake Merrit with Oakland buildings in the background and a gnarled log in the foreground

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Walking around Oakland’s Lake Merritt, my friend and I passed an old man sitting in boxers, pants around his ankles, shirt on a bench. A flasher? Nursing home run-a-way?

“Are you OK?” I asked.

“No speak English.”

Govoritsi po russki?” 

Delighted, he asked where I learned Russian. 

Universitet. Nimnogo”. (A little.)

Pochemu ty sprashivayesh’ (why are you asking): Are you ok?”

I pointed at his crumpled clothes.

He laughed, speaking unfamiliar words, ending with “veetzameende.”

Perplexed, I shrugged. 

He pointed at the sun. “Vee-tza-meen-de!” 

I laughed, nodding goodbye. “He’s fine,” I told my friend. “Just soaking up some Vitamin D.”

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Remembering Bob (7 years later)

A man with grey hair, walking sticks, and a brace supporting his neck and forehead, is smiling, sitting on a log next to a trail that ascends through a forest.

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My father-in-law Bob parented his 11 children, and dozens more. A loving advisor, he’d say, “Don’t burn your bridges” (before you screwed up), and “Oh, well” (after).

He defied mortality until, without warning, he accepted fate, soul packed, ready to go. When I spoon fed him ice chips, he smiled. “More?”

“No,” he whispered. “Gin and tonic.”

His family surrounded his bed, saying “I love you”, telling stories, and singing “Amen” (substituting “Oh Well”). Before his eyes shut, they twinkled. The sun does that too, a shimmer of color as it sets: “I’m not gone. Just on the other side.”

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Broken

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A 20-foot tall sculpture of a goddess, made out of found materials (scraps of wood, plastic, paper, and trash) with her arms outstretched, with her back to a bay at sunset

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Broken. Hearts. Budgets. Families. Bodies. Promises. Dreams.

Walking by The Bay, my friend and I admire art born of broken things: mosaics, tree chandeliers, a 20-foot goddess sculpture, arms outstretched, offering a hug. Or praying.

In a thicket, we discover a House for Secrets and read:

I never told anyone …

People think …, but I’m really …

How can I go on?

My friend’s brain is broken. (Fucking tumor.) Heart too.

She says, “Let’s paint affirmation cards — like you send me — for here. That people can keep.”

You can be broken and be a healer.

Both can be true.

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A 4-foot tall structure in the shape of a house. It is black, with a peaked roof, and tucked under a tree by the bay, stuffed with and surrounded by notes, letters, and various objects and bits of art.
18 small cards with simple watercolor paintings and affirmations, next to a tray of paints

60 Reasons

Sunset over the fog-covered San Francisco Bay

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Sixty reasons to wake tomorrow: Sunrise. Gotta pee. Husband. Kids. Partners. Grandkids. Mom. Brothers. In-laws. Old Friends. New Friends. Kids’ Friends. Neighbors. Colleagues. Activists. Celebrations. Memorials. Support Groups. Writing Salons. All dogs. Some cats. Fuzzy socks. Sunshine. Chocolate. Voting. Hot showers. Poetry. Painting. Biscuits. PJs. Books. Music. Nature walks. Plumbing. Rainbows. Refrigeration. Apples. Trees. Radio. Sunsets. Laughter. Tears. Redwoods. Waterfalls. Writing. Listening. Learning. Affirmations. Butterflies. Movies. Maps. Podcasts. Daydreams. Lightening. Surviving birth. Reading Mom’s old stories. Hugs. (If vaxed. And tested.) Reaching 30, then 50 (sick, but kicking). Birthdays. (I’m Turning 60 tomorrow.) Another chance to say, “I love you.”

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Tulips are Worthless

A bouquet of yellow and red tulips on a wooden table

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To grow, a tulip bulb needs space, out of sight. In fall, she’ll put down roots. In winter, she’ll start forming roots, leaves, flowers. In spring, she’ll send up a shoot to check: “Is it safe?” 

When it’s time, she’ll bloom. Witnessed or not, it’s what she’s meant to do. The bloom will only last a week or two. 

If you tell a friend tulips are “ugly” or “worthless” because they only put on a short show once a year, they’ll declare, “That’s ridiculous. I love them.” 

And yet, that same friend will try to tell you they’re not enough.

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Desmond Tutu — A Light in the Dark

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In the midst of this pandemic, Nobel Laureate Archbishop Desmond Tutu has died. Twenty-six years ago, an international assembly of people living with HIV/AIDS gathered by candlelight in his Cape Town church, where South African activists pointed to their new leader, President Nelson Mandela, as a reminder to never give up.

Life-saving medications came a year later, in 1996. Protease inhibitor development for HIV took 15 years; protease inhibitors for COVID-19 took two. Blessed be the faith leaders, advocates, medical workers, journalists, scientists, and caregivers who were too busy helping to abandon hope. Without them, where would we be now?

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Christmas Magic

A Christmas tree with an angel on top, decorated with candy canes and ornaments, with live red candles on it glowing in the dark, next to an elderly woman playing the piano

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1-year olds: They prefer crumpled paper to presents.

4-year olds: They beg for glass ballerina ornaments. “They’ll break.” They beg. I cave. (It’s Christmas.) Of course, they shatter.

10-year olds: We decorate in order: angel, popcorn, candles, candy canes, ornaments. After dark, we watch candles flicker and melt away, singing “Silent Night”.

16-year olds: Their friends come to see the candles. “Won’t it catch fire?” I’m 59.  It hasn’t yet. Entranced, they sing, forgetting their phones.

24-year olds (2020): We connect— from DC, Santa Barbara, Donner Pass — over Zoom. Even with candles, it’s not the same. COVID sucks.

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This Is How It Begins…

Dominoes fallen over paper moeny

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Every year, our finances would look OK in December. Forgetting January’s insurance premiums and February’s property taxes, I’d think we had enough to “really make Christmas nice this year.”

Then, at what should have been a shiny start to a sparkly new year, the credit card bill would come. I’d realize the cuddles and conversations were what made me feel so connected, not the presents (now months of debt). Why did I buy all that stuff? 

All I wanted was for people to know how much I love them. Advertisers are selling us stories. We don’t have to buy them.

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