Monthly Archives: February 2007

Correspondence

Amongst the history of my mother, the detritus of her life, is her correspondence. It is preserved in the page upon page, pad upon pad, carbon upon carbon. She was raised back in the day when people did correspond, in written form both frequent and copious. She saved copies of this correspondence as carbon copies when carbon paper was at hand, and as hand written copies when it was not. It is these copies of correspondence which preserve her memory, in part. And it is these correspondence, too, that weight me down, spiritually and literally. The boxes and bags of this written evidence of a life once lived fill closets.

These days our correspondence too frequently is both slight and fleeting. I have realized, however, that one trait I share with my mother is my collecting of it. I have archives of email going back many many years, to a time when most people still didn’t know what email was. In today’s world of electronic avatar and emoticon this archive still connects me back, tethers me in a way, to the past.

It is in my mother’s archive that I have found a way to share in parts of her life which I was not around for and that in her mind were either not worthy of remembering to her son, or would not bear foreign scrutiny. I have learned, for example, of her initial impressions of my father, her affairs of the heart, and then finally of her rapture at the prospect of marriage. “Alec Bernstein, English biochemist, pleasant enough, somewhat boring” is how she described him in the dramatus personae in a letter to her youngest sister written only 10 months before they would wed. She went on to write of a magical late February night of capering with several other grad students and one young man, her professor’s younger brother who was visiting from Chicago and had caught her eye. This was all written in the form of a play (hence the cast list). Later that year, in June if I recall correctly, she wrote with passion of a weekend visit to Chicago to the campus of this chap. Nothing more is preserved in the written record until November of that year and her letter to her oldest brother, Billy, to tell of her impending marriage to my father and of her joy and happiness.

Someone examining my own archive in some far off future will have to dig mightily to find anything of such passion or import. They will find a record of the dissolution of my relationship with my brother Joe, and of the prosaic rendering of my mother’s estate to its various heirs. There would be the history of my business dealings and my worries and concerns of entreaties both rash and over reasoned. That collection does not burden me.

New cocktail invention

White Countess

A fine confection to watch colonial dénouements by

White Countess:

In a double Old-Fashion glass, pour over ice:

1 ½ oz. Vodka (use something good)

6 – 8 dashes Angostura bitters

Splash Sweet Vermouth

top off with club soda (seltzer)

Stir vigorously and sip with a mixture of hope, sorrow and reckless yearning.

12-step program for e-mail addiction stumbles

By way of Network World’s Paul McNamara comes this chestnut
of a blog post in response to a Rueters story Twelve-steps to curing e-mail addiction. I’m rather skeptical of technology addictions in general, but in this case the cure is arguably worse than the symptoms. Check out these steps, like #2: “Commit to keeping your inbox empty.” Virtually every step in this twelve step program involves doing something with your email. This is akin to asking an alcoholic to work in a liquor store. McNamara’s response? “What am I missing? I’m already committed to keeping my inbox empty. I’m so committed to keeping my inbox empty that I’m checking my e-mail more often than hibernating animals breathe. I don’t need more commitment. I need to be committed.”

Serious relationship trouble

If You Can’t ‘Date’ Yourself, You Might As Well Commit Suicide

Dude #1: Look at me — I’m a hairy beast. I don’t think even I could date myself.
Dude #2: Yeah, man, I don’t think I could even date you — you just wouldn’t be my type.
Dude #1: That hurts, man.
Dude #2: It would be a shitty relationship, anyway.
Dude #1: … Yeah, you’re right.

–Neptune Diner

Overheard by: Nathaniel Jones

via Overheard in New York, Feb 19, 2007

Welcome to the second worst foreign policy mistake in the history of this country

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) famously said on Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer on CNN Saturday “This war is a serious situation. It involves the worst foreign policy mistake in the history of this country.” This obvious statement was met with various responses. “I believe it’s one of the worst blunders, certainly is,” New Mexico’s Democratic Governor Bill Richardson also said on CNN, echoing Republican Senator (and potential Presidential candidate) Chuck Hagel’s comment that the nascent troop buildup “represents the most dangerous foreign policy blunder in this country since Vietnam.”
The White House wasn’t willing to let this stand. They challenge the notion that this is the worst foreign policy mistake in history. Okay, perhaps they’re right. Maybe its the just second worse.

I just watched the movie “Welcome to Sarajevo,” shot right after the end of hostilities in that sad place. There is a scene in the movie, basically a war correspondent’s diary akin to “The Year of Living Dangerously”, in which the UN High Commissioner for Refugees and a bunch of other UN and foreign dignitaries land. The journalists ask what efforts will be made to help the civilians in this “the most dangerous place on earth?” The UNHCR corrects them, “There are thirteen places more dangerous in the world today.” During the rest of the movie, new comers are greeted with “Welcome to the fourteenth most dangerous place on earth!”
So, welcome to the second worst foreign policy decision in history. Don’t know what the first one was, but welcome to our own little slice of hell.

Say what?

French poster la Dolce Vita“Everyone called her Gigi, and I remember her dancing uninhibitedly with friends in the Roman ruins at Ballbek late at night during the civil war.”
So says Charles Glass in “The Lord of No Man’s Land: A guided tour through Lebanon’s ceaseless war.” in the latest issue of Harper’s Magazine
Now this may well be true, but it reads to me like someone who has been wanting to use that line for a long, long time and this article was his excuse. Someday I’ll have a line worthy of writing an entire Harper’s piece in support of.
Either that or he’s simply channeling Fellini. Wasn’t that scene in La Dolce Vita??

Against the Dying of the Light

On a death and dying roll here, so here is one other oldie. From The Times again, November 17, 2002:

To the Editor:
“More Than Death, Fearing a Muddled Mind” (front page, Nov. 11) gave a vivid description of dementia.
I am 92, my wife is 91, and we have been married for more than 68 years. I can tell you that to be a caretaker of someone who is afflicted with this disease is to be cursed. There are constant suggestions of what to do next from well-meaning friends and relatives, but you still only do what you can. It is very difficult.
Hy Grober
Teaneck, N.J., Nov. 11, 2002