“WHERE I USED TO LIVE (PART 1)

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(Originally posted on the website Continuum…)

(This story is dedicated to Peter Martin*)

IN the picture accompanying this article (taken in April 2003), if you look through the fence, past the trees and across the river, you will see a road going up the hill through the leafless trees. Just a short distance from the crest of that hill is where I used to live – in another life, very long ago. It was seven years ago actually. I lived there before my second divorce. I thought I would tell you about it.

Seven years ago, there were seven people living in that house. J was 12 years old (the same year we discovered he had a seizure disorder), S was 10 years old (I have a cute picture of her as a Girl Scout that year), T was 9 years old (a cool kid even then), H was 2 (with the most beautiful blonde curls), and little M was less than a year (not even walking yet). Oh yeah, Sam and the woman he was married to were… older than the kids. (Did you think I’d give away my age? Ha!)

WHEN we first bought the house, the living room was “velvetted” with the lushest of 1970’s orange shag carpet. It was not “retro-70s.” It had really been there since the 70s. Also, the stains from the former occupant who used to change the oil of his motorcycle in the living room were a charming touch. The paneling was of a deep color I believe is called “Death by Mahogany.” The kitchen had a somewhat lighter paneling (“Suicide in Pine”), with an orange counter, which cleverly matched the chaos happening in the living room. Amazingly, the rest of the house was “normal” with white plaster walls and nothing-to-speak-of carpeting.

After a year or so of orange torture, we decided to remodel the living room. I removed the paneling only to discover orange walls! When I “dropped” the drop ceiling, what do you think I found? Unbelievable! An orange ceiling! Think of it! Orange above! Orange below! Orange all around! What were they thinking???

“I like orange. I just want to sit around all day, puff the magic dragon and listen to Led Zeppelin, while surrounded by orange.”

You idiot! They sang “The Lemon Song,” not “The Orange Song!” Yellow would have been more tolerable! Especially in a pastel! You had your bands mixed up. You must have had a Tangerine Dream 8-track in the old player when you were tokin’ on one! Man!

WITH the help of friends and family, I did the living room right. The kids were issued claw hammers and promptly went to work gutting the room. We stripped it down to plain old brick. Then I installed new insulation, sheet rock, and spackling. The walls were painted an off-white color. New berber carpet was laid. A stucco ceiling and ceiling fans added the finishing touches. Nice.

Even before the renovation, friends and family were often found in our home. Hospitality was the sign over the door. We didn’t care if we knew you forever or just met you when you showed up at the door. You were welcome. You were fed. You were valued.

For example, one of my fondest memories is of a time when our friends, Rich and Susan, were experiencing hard financial times. Without much ado or even a second thought, we headed to our big freezer full of groceries and filled a few bags up for them. What did we give them? The filet mignon! Damn right! Our mottos were, “It’s better to give than to receive,” and “Let them eat filet mignon!” (and cake only if they finished their vegetables)

In those days, we were Christians, actively involved in church and practical in caring about people. It was common for our living room to be filled with 20 or more people on a Friday night for times of informal singing and Bible study. (Imagine me with hair past my shoulders, an earring, jeans and a T-shirt, teaching from the Bible! Stranger things have happened! Remember the orange living room?) Afterwards there were always refreshments: tea, coffee, pastries. Hospitality was the word.

YET, somehow the weather changed. Cold winds drifted through and someone’s heart grew cold. The new walls lost their luster and the new carpeting offered no comfort. When I said, “I feel like I lost your heart somewhere along the way,” she simply laughed. Fall had arrived and winter was quickly approaching.

It was decided that we would move from Easton, Pennsylvania to Belington, West Virginia. The plan was that we would help my then mother-in-law with her start-up software company. It was a grand plan. I would be sent to school to learn computer programming. We would live with her on 40 acres of pristine West Virginia land. This would enable us to improve our financial condition and provide better careers for us.

The catch was that the three children from my first marriage were going to live with their mom in New Jersey when we moved. You have to understand how difficult this decision was for me. I had cared for these three children on my own for several years, due to alcoholism and drug abuse on my first wife’s part. I potty trained them. I made sure their immunizations were up to date. I saw them off to kindergarten on their first days of school. I fed them, bathed them, read to them, nurtured them. I baked the birthday cakes and wrapped the presents. I was Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy all in one. (One year “Santa” forgot to dispose of the extra wrapping paper. His explanation was that he wanted to leave the wrapping so that the children would have something to wrap gifts for other people in and learn how to be generous like he was. Whew! They bought it!) It was extremely hard to allow them to go live with their mother while I moved 400 miles away.

MY heart was not fully engaged in moving to West Virginia, as you can well imagine. I worried for my children. I worried about living with my mother-in-law who did not think well of me to begin with. I worried about the subtle eerie vibes I was picking up from my wife.

During Christmas break in 1996, J, S, and T moved to their mom’s house. On December 26, the day after Christmas, my wife’s brother and her mother’s boyfriend arrived with a rented U-haul trailer to move her and our two little girls to West Virginia. They almost left before I even got home from work to say good-bye. (In hindsight, that should have been one of several warning signals I should have picked up on.) I was scheduled to follow them a month later in order to put in enough time on my job to earn another full week of vacation. It was a lonely month. Everyone was gone. Even most of our friends had been alienated either by choice or by misunderstanding. I felt isolated. Alone. I remember one night, standing in the middle of that once congregational but now deserted living room, with tears on my cheeks and a sense of impending but unavoidable trouble. Yet, even then, I could have never imagined the upheaval and heartache that were soon to come.

I was left to pack up the house on my own. The scope of the job was daunting. The growing sadness in my heart made it burdensome. I am thankful for two friends who so kindly helped me at that point. LeRoy Magyar arrived one night and patiently helped me wrap china and Corelle dishes in old newspapers. Pete Martin came on the night before I was to depart for West Virginia and helped me load the house into a U-haul until 3 in the morning. We even ripped out the berber carpet, rolled it up and taped it tightly (then proceeded to clobber each other with rolls of carpet that weighed millions of pounds!).

I spent three months in West Virginia while things steadily deteriorated with my wife. It takes two to make a relationship work. But it can take just one to end it. Once one decides in his or her heart that they are no longer going to work to sustain the relationship, there is no amount of effort, sacrifice, begging, promising, crying or praying that the other person can do to make any difference at all. It is over whether you like it or not. At that point I was rather heartlessly advised by my wife to “just get a grip and deal with it.”

IN April of 1997, I was back in my home state of New Jersey. I was broken-hearted, bankrupt financially, separated from the three children I worked so hard to raise, 400 miles from my two daughters who were only 1 and 3, and isolated from my former friends. Some compared me to Job in the Bible. No, my children had not been killed by a freak storm. I still had my health. But for all intents and purposes, the seeming unfairness of it all was strikingly similar to Job’s. (In fact, my kids brought a gerbil home from school at that time. They gave him to me because they “didn’t want me to be alone.” We named him Elijah Job because Elijah was a man like any other man who prayed fervently and God heard him (James 5:17, 18). Job was a man who faced unprecedented hardships yet said, “Though He (God) slay me, yet will I trust in Him.” (Job 13:15)

I could go into details about this part of the story. (Maybe some day I will.) I could tell you how it felt to walk back into that old house in April of 1997. I could describe how it was haunted with the sounds of laughter and children’s voices. I could tell you of how I had to chop down the overgrown yard with the only tool available – a shovel – while tears streamed from my eyes and blood dripped from my hands. I could tell you of the humiliation I was forced to endure when I returned to my former place of employment. After holding one of the best jobs for 13 years, upon my return I was given a position of cleaning drains and scrubbing floors – for $2 less an hour than I was making just three months prior. It would take many pages just to recount the times I sat down and asked, “Why?”

However, I want to make the point that this is where I “used” to live. Now when I look back at that time of my life, it feels like a tale from someone else’s life, or a portion of an old book that I vaguely remember. There are more than merely fences or rivers that separate me from that life. Now that I am starting to experience the benefits of all those hardships, I sometimes wonder how I could have even shed one tear over any of it.

Of course, I know that it was only by going THROUGH those hardships that I was able to arrive at this point of my life. Seven years ago, something inside me said, “There is no other way but through.” I knew that I would cheat myself if I tried to go around the hard things that were handed to me. I could have retreated to alcohol or drugs myself. I could have shirked my responsibilities to my children with the excuse that life had dealt me more than I could bear. I could have tried to escape in any one of a million ways.

The Apostle Paul wrote that “all things work together for good to those who love God.” A theological view.

Napoleon Hill wrote (many centuries after Paul), “In every adversity there is the seed of an equal or greater opportunity.” An optimistic and practical view.

I am finding that they are both correct. Despite many misgivings and doubts, I am slowly but surely finding it to be so.

This is where I try to live now.

Perhaps I will elaborate on these things in the future. All questions are welcome.

(* whose friendship is invaluable and whose much appreciated bottle of homemade wine accompanied me in the writing of this article.
I need a refill, bro!)

OF RATTLESNAKES AND BROKEN SOULS

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(Originally posted on the website Continuum…)

THERE are times when I man just needs to get away. It’s not necessarily a retreat as much as it is a regrouping. A time to think. A time to evaluate, sort through, weigh. He needs to get away from the chaos and the crowd. Turning his back on civilization for a time, he needs to seek out solitude and quietness.

By the end of the afternoon today, my soul was craving just this very thing. I felt somewhat broken, discouraged, tired. I had to be alone. It was 6:30 PM. A hot, hazy August evening in New Jersey. The sky hung low to the earth without movement. The sun was orange and declining.

THAT’S when the idea hit me. I needed to climb a mountain. The best one I know is Mt. Tammany at the Delaware Water Gap. I could make it there in a half-hour, hike as fast as I could and make it to the top to watch the sunset. The exercise would do me good. So off I went! The only preparation I made was to put my boots on. Which was not much of a preparation considering that there are a few worn out spots on the soles.

It is a 20-mile drive from Washington to the Gap. I could see the sun drooping down the bleary sky. Now it had become a race to get to the top of that mountain before the sun was gone. I walked across the paved parking lot and onto the Appalachian Trail at 7:12 PM. My bet was that I would get to the top just as the sun was setting.

TEN MINUTES up the steep trail and I was huffing and puffing like a mad man. That didn’t happen the first time I hiked this trail about 17 years ago! But I guess 17 years has an effect on a guy. So does the 30 extra pounds that came along with the 17 years.

Many times I have hiked at the Water Gap. Often with my kids or friends. Many times alone. Often on those solitary hikes I carry many concerns and cares. My back is laden with worries, fears, questions, frustrations. My mind is crowded with thoughts.

There is only so much a man can carry. He can only rise so high on the mountain with the weight of the world on his shoulders. He can only journey so far on the trail while he is pressed down and hurting inside.

AS I CONTINUED up the mountain tonight, slowly, singly, some of my cares began to drop off along the way. There was a nice breeze as I reached the higher levels of the trail. To some extent I felt as if the breeze was lifting my spirits, lifting my thoughts, and blowing away the lesser concerns in my soul. By the time I made it to the top of the mountain only two main things occupied my mind. They were thoughts of God and thoughts of a person. Interesting. I wonder how interesting God, so far above us, thought it was as I sat on top of the rocky outcropping, looking over the hazy Pocono Mountains, talking to Him about just one person out of the billions that live here below.

Yet, even at the higher altitudes in life, the concerns and annoyances return, just like the mosquitoes that were ever so happy to feast on my sweaty body. The sun never set. It just phased out in the murky grayness, a disappointment. It started to get dark. The insects were almost deafening. My feet were hurting because now both soles on both of my boots were broken. I needed to get off the mountain.

I HAD a small flashlight with me. But my eyes were adjusting fine to the steadily darkening woods around me as I walked. Every now and then I had to stop to push a sole back into a boot. I was just slightly nervous walking through the woods in the dark, mainly because of the abundance of insects all around.

I wasn’t too far along the trail on my way back down when it happened. Have you ever come within a few mere inches of stepping on a rattlesnake in the dark? Have you ever done so with half your foot exposed through the bottom of your boot? Did you know that the words “Holy Fuck!” shouted at the top of your lungs are an effective snake repellent? He rattled and hissed and started moving! I danced on my worthless boots and prayed/cursed in multiple languages at the same time! It was too dark to see which direction he was headed. So I gave up all hope of the two of us ever being buddies and ran as fast as my broken soles would allow. Downhill! Downhill! Downhill! Stumbling in the dark like a damn idiot!

Then I remembered the flashlight! What a difference light makes! While careening down the hill in the dark, the ground was covered with snakes, the woods were filled with hungry bears, and rabid raccoons lined the trail. But the light scared them all away, replacing them with the sticks and stones, logs and bushes that were normally there. I calmed down. The cursing stopped. But the praying continued to a degree.

I realized the analogy to other fears in my life. Truth and understanding so often dispel many anxieties. The anxieties wear down my soul. It’s amazing how I can revive when even a small amount of light enters my soul at times. Yet, it seems to be a lesson that I have a hard time learning. The uncertainties and unknowns of life often cause me to stumble, trip over things in the dark, sometimes fall.

IT FELT like it took a long time to get out of the forest tonight. Many of the concerns of the day were waiting for me at the bottom of the hill. But you never saw a man so happy to see a paved parking lot as I was tonight! I was happy to rejoin civilization and make my way home on the freeway. My spontaneous misadventure, which could have proved deadly, was over. I was drenched in sweat. My boots were trashed. My feet were blistered. Yet my soul was somewhat stronger than it was when I started.

SINGLE PARENTHOOD

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(Originally posted on the website Continuum…)

THERE are frustrations that often enter one’s life. We have to live with the fruits of our doings, the outworking of our poor decisions, the consequences… the bloody consequences. For what is the life of a human being so often? Is it not so much foolishness and weakness, rashness and selfishness, cruelty to others and to ourselves?

What of cruelty to others? Are we not all guilty to some degree and in varying frequencies? Who has not hurt another? Stand up and we shall all applaud you, adorn you with a pure white robe, and apply a medal of achievement to your chest until you bleed. This is how we honor one another.

Harsh words? Perhaps. I feel them. I feel the frustration. I live with it.

WHAT IS life as a single parent? Do YOU know?

It is all that mentioned above. It is feeling the results of poor decisions (perhaps). It is realizing that what you considered to be the best time of your life (perhaps) for a brief period of time was in truth plain foolishness. It is the swallowing of the rancid fruit of your own selfishness (perhaps). It is the embracing of the cruelty of another upon you (often).

Single parenthood is a stigma. It is a handicap. Recently, on NPR, I heard a report about the difficulty that those with physical and mental handicaps face in the job market. A paralyzed woman lamented that when she entered an office for an interview, the first thing the interviewer noticed was her chair. Her wheelchair. She said, “I wish that they would just see me for ME.” She complained that she was too often defined by her disability rather than by who she was as a person. It struck me that such is the case of a single parent.

Deep within the hearts of many single parents that I know is a desire, a craving, to be known for the people that they are. They do not want to be defined by their disability. They do not want to be viewed as a person with “baggage.”

“Look at that invalid in the wheelchair.”

“Look at the cripple.”

“Look at the retard.”

“Look at the divorced girl with a whole bunch of kids.”

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People are people. Dreams are dreams. Desires are desires. They still live within the heart of the single parent. But his hopes for their fulfillment are often crushed because others do not see HIM. They focus on his “chair.”

MANY of us were thrust into the role of single parent against our wishes and despite our most valiant efforts. We were handed the script and pushed onto the stage. There are no stunt doubles here. There is no intermission. The good guys do not always win. There is no curtain call and roses tossed at your feet as you take your bow. (You lower your head too much and it’s bound to get kicked in!) No, we have to live this script line by line and take our cues despite the din of the critics.

“Et tu, Brute?”

“Yes, my darling, for I never loved thee.”

“Say it isn’t so.”

“But, yes! Let me rip out thine heart while I kiss thee! Viva la betrayal!”

NO, I am not bitter. NO, I do not miss “her.”

I am trying to describe what it is like from the perspective of one who has been through it, one who is in it. It is not easy. It is not pleasant. There is no manual, no roadmap. You just determine in your heart that, no matter what, you are not going to lay down and die. Against all hope you will believe in hope. When they kick you in the teeth, you will stand up and flash them your best smile. When they punch you in the stomach, you will still manage to wish them a nice day. When they malign your good name, you will hold your head up and walk on. Somehow. Some way. You won’t let them win.

But there are times when you want to throw in the towel. You can’t take anymore. You drop your arms to your side and pray that the next punch sends you into oblivion. What is the use in fighting anymore when it seems that your are pounding your head against a brick wall? The life that you imagined that you would have is so far away. The simple, peaceful life that you hoped for your children has been made complicated and chaotic. You learn to expect the opposition. If all seems well for a time, it is only because the other foot has not fallen. You will yet be squashed.

You see, the challenges a single parent faces are many-fold. There are financial challenges. Either the ex isn’t paying you as they should, or you are responsible to pay an exorbitant amount of money to your ex, often to the point that you face great difficult or even impossibility in living as an independent adult. There are logistic challenges. How do you get the kids to school on time, without forgetting any books or lunch money, and get yourself to your job with a sufficient level of composure? What happens when a child gets sick? Who has to leave their job (usually again) to pick the child up and get her to the doctor? Who has to scramble to make arrangements for the following day for the sick one? There are emotional challenges. How do you love and nurture your little ones when your heart is often broken and sometimes overwhelmed by loneliness? How do you persuade someone who you are attracted to to reach in among the thorns and touch the sweet smelling rose which is who you are? The frustrations abound. I offer no solutions here. I only point out the frustrations.

Well, maybe it’s just me. Maybe I just had a bad day. Maybe it’s not as bad as I make it out to be.

Maybe.

But how would YOU know?