Archive for the 'Back In the Day' Category

Suicide

Earlier this month, I had a garage sale and got to meet some of the elderly neighbors from down the street, people who have lived here for a thousand years and can tell you the history of every house and every family that lived in it. One of the gentlemen I met, a retired widower who spends all his time fixing up old cars, told me all about its prior owners, first a local judge, then a couple of professors that fought famously bitterly every night, and then the family that lived here before us: a married couple and their two children. The other gentleman, a retired pharmacy professor who is hard of hearing and is fighting cancer, came later, and unceremoniously told me some news that I have been trying to avoid since we moved in.

I can not reveal too many details because I don’t know who reads this blog, and any local who does a little research is easily able to identify who I’m talking about. The short version is that the wife killed herself in the house after a long battle with severe, debilitating depression. It was a terribly traumatic event for the family, as can be expected, but it was especially so for the children who witnessed their mother’s final act.

But the gentleman that told me was so matter-of-fact and macabre about it, and gave so much grisly detail that I, cringing, tried to focus on the strangers picking through my unwanted things until he got bored and went back home.

I knew about it before we moved in. My mother tried to talk me out of this house, worried that it was bad luck. I told her that was a load of crap — I had loved this house so much from afar that when it went up on the market it was practically serendipitous. Over the years, people who knew the family tried to tell me what had happened, but I stopped them. I didn’t want to know. I met the former owner once, when I found his wedding photo album pressed against a wall in a rarely used closet, and called him to retrieve it.

But occasionally, I wondered why there were so many renovations done to the house at once. One bathroom was redone very hastily while another was built anew — quickly enough that a bedroom window was walled off into the interior of the house. Was that paint on the floor in the basement? Dark things. Darker things. Sometimes I wondered whether my mother’s superstitions were well founded.

And then there was my neighbor in the driveway revealing the secret with so little reverence: it was Mrs. Peacock, in the Kitchen, with the Gun. How long it took them to “clean up the mess,” and “the children were there,” and “planned it ahead of time so they’d find her,” and “such a nice lady, she spoke a little Italian and sometimes she’d come over and practice with me.” Had our surroundings been any less absurd, I’d have wanted to drop to my knees and cry.

I’m familiar enough with the legacy of suicide, how it is preceded by it’s victims, their suffering, crescendoed with the losses of the living. (Shortly after I wrote that post, we lost three more friends and family members to suicide.) I won’t lie and say that, in my battle with depression as a teenager, I didn’t try it. It runs in the family, in my husband’s family — the way I say it, it sounds contagious. In my experience, depression sometimes is. You don’t catch it from a house though.

Sometimes we get their mail. Today we got a newsletter addressed to the previous owner as a reminder that September 6th is the beginning of National Suicide Prevention Week. I thought I might remind you too.

Fort Necessity and Family Reunions, Oh My!

We got home from our trip to Pennsylvania yesterday, and thanks to some of your suggestions we did manage to visit Fallingwater as well as Fort Necessity and a couple of other places. I thought we were closer to Pittsburgh than we actually were, so once we realized that Pittsburgh meant another couple of hours in the car we stayed close to Uniontown.

Uniontown, PA, was the site for this year’s W****** Family Reunion, which is really less a reunion than it is a genealogy trip exploring my mother’s family lineage. My uncle’s baby, the reunion takes place biennially in a place that is historically relevant to the family history. All kinds of relatives, close and distant, showed up to participate, many of whom can only be considered relatives if you go back six or seven generations.

Continue reading ‘Fort Necessity and Family Reunions, Oh My!’

Letters

I have piles of this shit in my basement, including reams of love letters and poems in my basement from my torrid teenage love affair with Chef. Wait, I haven’t mentioned our previous rebel life together, when I was fourteen and Chef was sixteen? AND HE HAD A CAR??? A GEO TRACKER??? WITH REALLY COOL BUMPER STICKERS???! Remind me sometime and I’ll try not to give my mother a heart attack.

Lost (For a Good Reason) Boys

In truth, I’m just bitter that a certain License to Drive broke my DVD player last year after it was sent to me by a certain libertarian blogger that shall not be named, and I’m (*cough*) certain The Coreys were behind this.

Regardless, they’re back:

Corey Feldman and Corey Haim are reuniting in the name of reality TV.

The former teen idols and RDF USA (“Wife Swap”) have teamed with cable net A&E for “The Coreys: Return of the Lost Boys,” a comedic half-hour about their lives as grownups… Episodes will follow the two after Feldman decides to welcome Haim into his home to help put his life back together.

I was always fond of Corey Haim — who is apparently “broke and homeless” now — whereas Corey “The Other Corey” Feldman seemed like a self-absorbed douchebag in The Surreal Life without the good sense to leave Hollywood altogether instead of trying to relive the glory days on a tv show aimed to humiliate D-list celebrities. Haim was taking the high road. Or so I thought.

Now young entrepreneurs Feldman and The Haimster are also featured as authors of an MSN advice column on any topic your stonewashed heart desires. Need advice from washed up 80′s heartthrobs on how to temper your Keifer Sutherland obsession? How to tightroll your jeans? Who doesn’t? Direct your attention here.

So Dumb It’s Almost Charming

I don’t know what reminded me of this.

When I was in high school a friend of mine had such a huge crush on a girl that he shook off his beefcake jockboy image and wrote her a poem. It was called “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings” and had been featured that year in our English textbook.

Sadly, she was onto him (even though he’d had the sense to omit Maya Angelou’s name). I think they dated for about three months. Today he is a successful businessman. This in itself is depressing.