Thursday, April 6, 2017

...Epitaph Day...



“My Own Epitaph
Life's a jest, and all things show it.
I thought so once, and now I know it.”
~ John Gay

Blandford Cemetery, Petersburg, VA
Rock Creek Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
Today is Plan Your Epitaph Day which is a day to reflect on your mortality, and even to consider what you would like to leave on your gravestone.

Hebrew Cemetery, Richmond, VA
Here, we’re having a terrible storm this morning with thunder and lightning so instead of going to a cemetery to look at epitaphs I’ve looked through my old photo albums and selected some of my favorites.

Green Lawn Cemetery, Columbus, Ohio

Whenever I see articles about epitaphs, they usually focus on those that are funny or slightly weird. I tend to be drawn to those that tell a little about the person.

Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, VA


Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, VA
Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, VA
Blandford Cemetery, Petersburg, VA
Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, VA




Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, VA



Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, VA
Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, VA


Tuesday, April 4, 2017

...childhood fears & building libraries...



“To build up a library 
is to create a life.”
~Carlos María Domínguez
 
I was a remedial reader all through elementary school. My mother hates when I tell that to people but it is the truth. For me, the library was horrifying. In fact, whenever I went to the school nurse, my mother would ask if it was “library time.” It always was.

I did not hate the library in the traditional sense; I hated the librarian. I don’t recall her name although her image is imprinted in my brain in the same category as other childhood fears. She was old, maybe 162, but I could be exaggerating; her hair was pulled back in a tight bun (maybe); and, I’m sure she had reading glasses that hung on the tip of her nose… well, I don’t really remember what she looked like. By “image” I mean the way she made me feel… which was awful.

I was a quiet, anxious child who cried when the school bus driver was sick and there was a substitute. I’ve grown into an anxious adult who cries whenever there is change. I never learned how to resolve such things even in therapy. This is me. This is who I am; or, this is who I have become.

The librarian yelled at children. While I was/am a rule follower who rarely goes against regulations, even when other kids were fussed at, I would cry; and, when I cried, I was seen. Being seen by the librarian was never good. She “shhhh”ed children; she hated her books being out of place. Gosh, I honestly don’t recall why she was so evil and I don’t want to call my mom to ask for her version of the story.

My parents always worried about me. They tried their best but as members of the Silent generation, they were programed not speak up. Teachers and librarians were authority figures to be trusted and respected.

Bad-ass bunny ears from Leg Avenue
What I do know is that I missed out on so many books. This has come to my attention recently because our university theater department’s fall play is Bunnicula, which has inspired us in the English Department to throw a Bunnicula party because that’s what you do when you work in the nerdiest/coolest department on campus. This week I have been putting together my outfit since I have decided to be inspired by the story, and not dress in a bunny costume. While my peers and I are all aflutter with preparations, there is a great deal of talk about the first time everyone read Bunnicula.

Published in 1979, I should have read this book when it was originally released. That is the year I started school. I have no way of knowing if our tiny rural, public school library (there wasn’t and still isn’t a public library in that county) even owned the book. I never checked out books; I avoided them because of the mean librarian. I was pulled out of classes to work with a remedial reading teacher; she became one of my favorite humans ever but that’s a whole other story.

While my peers have fond memories of reading about the dog-narrator Harold and the mysterious bunny with the sharp teeth and odd eating habits, I didn’t read the book until I was an adult.

My fella and I discuss the books we missed in youth, and how when you read them as adults through adult eyes, it’s never quite the same as someone who grew up loving them. I sometimes wonder if my academic focus on adolescent literature is because it is a way of taking back my childhood reading days.

Whatever the reason, I treated myself to the Bunnicula in a Box set. Before our party in three weeks, I will read all of the books in the collection, not just the first book.  

I love the quote. I will be building up my library to continue creating my life for myself until the very end of my days. One can never have too many piles of to-be-read books.

Sunday, April 2, 2017

...flowers out of the dead land...




“April is the cruelest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.”
~T.S. Eliot
This weekend has been THE best weekend for this girl since October 2016 when I fell off the train (literally)! The winter has been cruel; hell, 2016 sucked and 2017 hasn’t looked much better.

But, then came the weekend. Yesterday, on my long to-do list, I timed it so that if I finished grading before 10am I could go clean-up the garden, which hasn’t been touched since October. I didn’t even do my Fall organizing since I was limping around back then. Everything was left in place to winter the seasons. Fortunately, it seemed like it all fared okay… for the most part, but I’ll get to that.

I finished grading at 10:20am, which was good enough for me! I headed out to the garden to rake leaves from the fall; pick up broken yard-art (including a broken plate from a yard-art flower that ended up biting me… but hey, no stitches!); clean out the bird house and the watering can that a bird made her nest in (which we knew was a bad idea so as I was cleaning it out, I found the dead bird… I burst in tears, my fella was upset)… crying in the garden is a safe place to do such things so I cleaned and I cried. Then after a frog landed on my face and I was able to guide him to a safe area, I weed-wacked (I won’t let the lawn crew come in my yard since they destroy everything).

I found new growth; I freshened up the whirligigs that will probably need to be replaced by the end of the summer; I debated if my falling-apart lawn furniture will survive one more season (I think so but I’ll let you know if anyone crashes through a chair). And, now I’m itching to plant flowers and herbs even though as I write this my toes are cold. I tell myself soon. Soon I will be out there.

Today was spent in a cemetery with the River City Cemetarians. It was a beautiful, sunny day to learn a bit of history. Our group had a tour of a historic Jewish cemetery. While there have been so many sad news reports about vandals in Jewish cemeteries, it was nice that the group could make a sizable donation to their museum and archives group.

It was also a perfect day to start thinking about a blog post for Plan Your Epitaph Day, which is this Thursday. Many of us know this thanks to Insomniac's Attic 2017 calendar! This was the most interesting epitaph I saw today because of the wording. 

I have never seen such phrasing. It reads, “Carlena, relic of the late Benjamin Rose.”