“I’m willing to go $75 on both of them”
I know that
to many of you it may seem as if I’ve sort of vanished from the wine
blogosphere, and for the most part I guess that is true. I’m not sure I ever
belonged in that group to begin with actually, seeing as my blog is more of a
personal diary of sorts. My life, my son, my relationships, my passion both
before wine wrapped its textured tongue around me, swallowed me whole, and
after. I write, um maybe wrote is a more accurate word considering how often
I’ve been here as of late, (Been writing some soul searching and blisteringly
raw pieces for myself but I have been woefully absent from this space) for the
joy of finding my voice, sharing and maybe, just once in a while, making
someone feel a little more comfortable tucked into their own skin in this complex
and confusing world we all amble through. Felt like I was there for a bit but
somewhere along the way I succumb to the awkward tugging of these pages, my
bare flesh and emotion so exposed the utter nudity of my words making me both moist
with want to do more and susceptible to the lashings from those that shamed be
for everything from my lack of education to the insatiable gnarl of sensuality
that haunted me until I found this place to unzip.
Messes with
one’s head I assure you and as I have mentioned in posts earlier, I feel like I
have been binding and gagging myself in some sort of emotional self-mutilation.
So fucking cliché that I feel like I am preforming an act of flagellation by
stepping out from behind my silent cursor to strip down to my most naked and
defeated, all my blobby and chewed up bits unprotected for the bottom feeders
to feast upon. Fuck you. Eat the poison you fed me. Those toxic little
injections of anger, mockery, accusation and utter disregard coursing through
my already collapsing veins sending me seeking new ways to nod out….silence my
opiate of choice, until.
“I’m willing to go $75.00 on both”
I was
sitting with my son at the restaurant I am currently owned by. We were scarfing
spring rolls, our teeth tugging through the chewy skin to be met with sticks of
vibrant cucumber, crisp greens, densely packed charred sweet shrimp and a layer
of deep fried wrapper skin that has been tucked in the middle of the utterly
perfect roll, you know, just for added crunch and craveability. The viscous
orange sauce I’d seasoned with floral, and throat grabbing peppers, a blanket
of hedonism and punishment. The Vietnamese crepe with its painfully delicate
eggy crustiness balancing on our chop sticks as we folded pieces into cool
lettuce envelopes that we would douse with a sour bath of fish sauce and sweet
vinegar and fragrant purple herbs. The packet brought to our insatiable
palates, bean sprouts and tender shrimp bodies melting and exploding at the
exact same time. It was nearly enough, until.
“Have you
seen this?!”
“I can’t
fucking believe this”
“Are you
okay?”
The text
messages started mid meal and that sinking feeling I had been feeling for a
month, it was now an undertow that locked around my ankles and pulled me under
so deep and for so long I was terrified that I might not ever breathe correctly
again. Worse, not sure I wanted to considering the fact that hate actually won.
Election night 2016. I spent it in one of my
favorite spots, with someone I love more than any other on the planet, then I
came home, threw up and emotionally passed out on my couch. Clothes on, my
sickened breath redolent with the gin martini I “needed” before heading home
and the bile stirred up by a momentary loss in my faith. I don’t read a book, I
don’t pray at any alter. My faith lies in the oft kicked in the gut belief that
most of us, no matter how blobby and poisoned, scared, scarred and uncertain,
we are at our core decent. Trying to find my faith the next few days would
prove, erm, challenging and at times painful but….
“You got them both!”
A Facebook
message from my coworker Andy. He had been at the shop working our annual Su
Casa event. Su Casa, a group that helps victims of domestic violence escape and
begin a new, safe life. If there are more courageous and selfless people out
there I don’t know who they are. Each year Randy and Dale Kemner, my bosses,
offer up our space, provide wine and staff as well as a few snacks to Su Casa
so they can raise awareness, and funds that will provide much needed assistance
to families that just need that extended hand and safe space. Those of you that
have been reading me for any length of time will fully understand why this
cause is so near my heart. These individuals are what we should all aspire to
be, people that care for those so in need that even just the slightest beam of
brightness and hope will inspire their own inner superhero. Inspire them to
reach out to the hand that is being extended to them and run from the one that
has been pounding and reigning down upon them.
I’m going to
confess a weak truth. I never work this event. It’s too close and too hard for
me. I look at the faces of the women that come in to set up. Prep food. Fasten
balloons to tables and sign posts. Smell them heavily scented and feel their
palpable excitement for the evening like a sweet stroke over long ago healed
wounds, a whisper over my scars. I know I should be the first to volunteer but,
but I don’t. I prep cheese plates in the back and before walking out the back
door I look into our space, The Wine Country’s big welcoming embrace as newly
glammed up women work together fastening name tags, prepping prizes for the
raffle and shove big serving spoons in plastic bowls full of fresh fruit or mayonnaise
dressed salads in order to raise some money for their sisters that will come,
when they are ready. I soak it in each year and slip out the backdoor. Proud of
the people I work for and amazed at the overpoweringly uplifting and,
hopefully, inspiring nature of the whole scene. This year however…
Before I was
running out, too afraid to look anyone too deep in the eye, not for how they
might recognize my, edge, as much as for the fact that being in their presence
tends to cause a reaction in me that most find unnerving. Watching a grumpy
looking rock tear up is some sort of Hunter S Thompson level crazy and I find
most would rather not. Can’t say as I blame them, can you? Anyhow, this time I
took a few extra moments. Strolled the shop and decorations. Helped with affixing
balloons and assisted a lovely woman with caramel colored skin, shiny jet black
curls, cheerful eyes and full painted lips that stretched wide with every gesture
that made her tasks a little easier. She was stunningly confident and
comfortable and I envied her. Admired her. She had in her smile and wit
something I was drawn to. A longing. A familiar flicker that made me feel at
home. Safe. I followed her around with a tape dispenser taking deep breaths,
hoping I could breathe in some of her hope.
Heading out
just before the event was to begin and I was stopped, literally in my tracks,
by two paintings. I leaned in close. Studied the lines like I’d seen people in museums
all over the world do. My goofy uneducated noggin taking it all in. Hands
folded behind me, back slightly curved as I inspected the work being displayed.
Both pieces critically inspected I scribbled a, slightly low, bid on both of
them before straightening up my spine and walking over to Randy as I grabbed my
backpack.
“Randy, I want them. I’m willing to
go $75.00 on both”
Randy’s big
smile the kind of extended hand I was seeking. I knew, as I always know, he was
looking out for me and would do his best to help me, help lots of us. Climbing
into my car that night I knew I had an advocate, as a woman and as a person, in
my corner and I knew he would raise his paddle as it were and fight for my
instantly adored and longed for pieces genuine hope.
So now? Now
I get to wake up each morning, some easier than others but I wake up knowing
that no matter how much hate there is out there, in my home, my homes if you
include The Wine Country and this place, if y’all still want me, I have safety…and
hope.
Thank you Su Casa, Randy Kemner for all you do and thank you to Lamesha and Jose, your beautiful paintings full of honesty and hope grace my living room walls and remind me that as bad as things get, there is always hope. You give me the courage and desire to speak, loudly. Cry openly. Seethe secrety. Drink deeply. Love openly. Open my mouth and creek out my voice again, hopefully.
My Gorgeous Samantha,
ReplyDeleteOh, we want you back here alright. And this is a lovely piece. I love those paintings, too. The bird in front of our moon is terrific. That Jose might be going places.
Been a terrible year, people showing the worst of themselves. All that's left is kindness, and you are kindness personified, Samantha. Rub a bunch off on me. And don't stop until I tell you to.
Never stop.
But don't tease us by only writing once in a blue moon. We need more. I need more.
This piece made my day.
I love you so!
Over the past few months, I have lost the desire to talk to some people I have known for decades--family members. I could not--cannot--imagine what it is their souls, but it does not seem pretty, and it isn't what it appears to be on the surface. Rather than hateful, they are desperate; rather than self-contained, they are fearful; rather than alive, they have died along time ago, killed by unfulfilled wants and twisted insights.
ReplyDeleteFor the past two weeks I have walked, sat, lay down, stood up, exercised on my staionary bike, cooked, drank, banged on my keyboard, all under an extremely heavy weight that threatened to crush me flat and dead. It has been difficult to laugh, but not difficult to feel--if only the feeling were good. Then Sam's post comes along, and the feeling is good.
Ron My Love,
ReplyDeleteJose work is simply lovely. I walk past it first thing in the morning and right as I reach up and turn out the living room light before turning in for the night. So vibrant the colors. Vivid as is the fact that that young soul is struggling with how he can have his hero, his father, abuse his mother. He can deal with that and still be that hopeful. Precious reminder.
Thank you for reading Love, and caring if I write or not. Matters way more than you know.
I love you too!
Thomas,
How are you dear friend? I mean other than floored at the state of things, and souls. I am still struggling but this is what we have now and we have to fight even harder to make this a better place. Be advocates for each other. Speak out when we see injustice. I have to anyway. I am so glad my post made you feel good darlin. That made me tear up a little. Thanks for being here, always.
What Tom said, thank you and the best to you and yours for the holidaze!
ReplyDelete