alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for LJ Idol. The topic this week is "craic," an Irish term which means "an enjoyable social activity, a good time; great company and lively conversation."

KFP-birthday-age-12
KFP on a bumper car, looking aglow with joy



Turning 12, on Bumper Cars

Spinning blissfully, the five boys
each turn inward. As if with one mind,
they stare at one another in silent
communion. Their elongated legs
crooked to reach the pedals, they gaze
at one another. Paused,
for just this moment --

then someone releases a primal
yawp. They whirl furiously onward,
bumping collegially, almost
apologetically, as they
expand ever outward.






In honor of KFP, who turned 12 this week, having a rip-roaring good time with friends at an indoor fun center.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This has been a weird few weeks for me. Here are the highlights:

* A little more than two weeks ago, on May 24, KFP started sniffling a little. My husband and I thought it was seasonal allergies, since he has been bothered by them in the past. By Saturday, he had a mild cough, and since we were supposed to attend a party on Sunday with a person who gets kidney dialysis twice a week, I insisted we use one of our home tests and see if he had COVID. He did. While this did scrap our holiday plans, including participation with the Scouts in the Memorial Day parade that Monday, KFP's symptoms never worsened. He was completely healthy by Tuesday and even went on an overnight camping trip with the school, with the consent of the school nurse.

* My husband started sniffling on Saturday, May 30. He tested negative on that day and didn't retake the test until I urged him to take one again on Tuesday, June 1. He was positive. Being the mensch that he is, he isolated himself in the bedroom and wore a KN95 mask whenever he had to come out. I was bringing him meals and sleeping on the couch for several nights. He was feeling pretty good by Friday, June 6, when my son and I were packing for an overnight camping trip with the Scouts.

* Meanwhile, I was testing negative every single day and, as instructed by the CDC, wearing a KN95 mask whenever I went out. I still taught my classes, but I exercised extra caution and avoided close contact with my students.

* KFP and I went on the overnight camping trip, which involved the Scout leader, myself, our two sons, and one other Scout. Together, we did about a 4-hour hike with a lot of elevation, which was more challenging than anything I've done since I hiked the Appalachian Trail in high school. I was exhausted and in pain but very, very proud of myself afterwards. KFP even cooked me breakfast.

* By the time we returned, my husband was completely healthy again, so I washed all of the bedclothes, and he was released from "jail."

* Sometime during the day on Friday, June , I received a text from my aqua director at the main YMCA where I teach classes, telling me the pool would be closed for the weekend to deal with a safety issue. I then got a call upon arriving home with more details. It was the fact that the ceiling, which dates back to the 1960s, was starting to bulge downwards in areas. After an assessment, it was determined it needs to be entirely replaced. The pool is therefore closed until the end of the month.

* This means I currently have some freer days on my hands, and I'm using that time to follow-up on some personal projects. So I might actually be more vocal in here again, at least for the next month!


Oh! I should add my best theory as to why I never showed positive. Turns out that I might have been the first one in the family with COVID, but I had very different symptoms. About three weeks ago, I had a LOT of muscle pain in my legs that was actually so bad it made my knees feel similar to the way they did when I was still recovering from a couple knee injuries I've had in the past. At the same time, I was very tired, so that naps never seemed like enough for me. But I never had an upper respiratory symptoms, aside from morning sniffles that went away after blowing my nose.

Given my lifestyle -- I usually teach 6 to 7 hours of aqua fitness classes a week, in addition to doing weightlifting at home -- I thought the muscle pain was just from over-exertion. I did a lot of stretching, used my foam roller, took more OTC pain reliever and workout recovery supplements and powered through it. I also thought being tired was just the cumulative sleep deprivation from my admittedly weird sleep schedule.

So in other words, the symptoms never screamed, or even suggested, COVID to me, and I never tested.

Fortunately, I have been in the habit of wearing either a surgical mask or a KN95 mask when I'm out and about for several months, once the CDC suggested upgrading the type of masks you wear from cloth to medical-grade. I figured that since I was in and out of schools -- little germ factories -- and then teaching seniors at aqua fitnesses classes, it was the most responsible thing to do. So hopefully, if I did have it, I managed to avoid infecting anyone outside my immediate family.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for Week 9 of LJ Idol. This week's topic is "All Hat, No Cattle."

Parking lot #art: look down.
Abstract art in a parking lot; oil on pavement



death becomes my essence

gossamer wings of
squid glisten at the bottomless
abyss, a mystic cloud of porcelain sugar
raps lightly, clamoring in my ancient yearnings
i have injected thorny abstract distress
into the mad penumbra of my ebony consciousness
surreal fragments descend to the brim
of the darkening gulf
careening to the resounding roar
of forlorn frenzy
hypnotic trance, condemned existence,
my invincible soul is a small
trumpet
playing Taps

for a poem
by a bad poet
to the garbage disposal




This was inspired by one of the more overblown submissions I have received to my online literary magazine, Wild Violet. That particular poet was given to excessive use of modifiers, as this poem emulates.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for Week 7 of ()LJ Idol. This week's topic was “Do what you can, with what you have, where you are."

Stronger

When you want to punch
life in the throat, pick up
weights and do ten bicep curls.
Pump until your fibers burn.

When the nightmare closes in --
being a self-aware adult, that is -- drop
to your knees and do
twenty pushups. Throw in
some bonus tricep pushups.

With war swirling, with dystopia
closing in, bend your knees
and do thirty squat jumps
until your thighs smolder. Nothing
can survive that flame. Perish
thoughts with six minutes
of bicycle twists and weighted
crunches. Return your mind
inside your scorching self. Push
until you feel you might incinerate.

Then breathe.

Alyce Before a Workout
Me before my workout today, making a muscle

alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for <a="http://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org">LJ Idol. This week's topic is "Pursuit."

In Pursuit of Quiet

Innovation is a novel
process,
the computerized voice
intones. As my son hums
tunelessly, taps his fingers. When you act
in an assertive fashion, you know
what you want and persist
in getting it,
the voice tells him.
Vocabulary homework.

He asks me
what's for dinner. Homemade
chicken nuggets, easy
and gluten-free. Dinner
handled, I strive to type
anything worthwhile.

When you really push something,
you give it up or let it go,

the computer says. My son mutters
a joke, sotto voce.

Welcome to my now. My last
two years. My forever
after. A work-at-home writer
whose creative space never
quiets. Endless Zoom meetings,
then homework, video games. Noise.

Omnipotent. My son half-
rises, repeats deeply, "All power." Makes
a hissing noise -- rockets taking off.
"Omnipotent," he repeats.
The rocket sound again. I wonder
if, on test day, he'll hear rockets.

My son cheers, makes a trumpet sound
with pressed-together lips.
The voice continues: Relinquish. To
voluntarily withdraw or retreat.

My cursor blinks.

KFP Works on a Project
My son works on a computer project



---

While my son goes to school in person these days, he does have a lot more computer assignments than in the before-times. My husband is now permanently working at home for the nonprofit where he works as an IT manager, and he is on Zoom meetings constantly! These days, my only alone time comes either in the car, while taking a nap, or on the green-space breaks I take in local parks for at least a few minutes whenever I can spare it.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for Week 5 of LJ Idol, Three Strikes (http://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org). The topic this week is "Kuchisabishii," a Japanese term which refers to eating when you're not hungry, and is directly translated as "lonely mouth."

Alyce at the Pool
Me at poolside before class



Lonely Mouth

After class, she finds me
in the hot tub. Calls out cheerily, then launches
her litany of woes. This week, she'll see
a general practitioner
a G.I. specialist
a neurologist
a chiropractor
a podiatrist
a nutritionist
for diagnosis and treatment.

At 90-plus, her pains multiply. So many
chronic conditions, seeping into bones
and sinew, clogging up arteries,
impeding the natural flow of fluids
and air. Yet, she keeps going, keeps
moving in my aqua fitness class,
never complaining about
the challenges as we move
and groove to the beat. She's
given me these updates ever since
I first greeted her with a friendly
"How are you feeling today?"

Each day, her ailments change,
a perpetual tide, rising and falling.
The reality she battles, building
pressure inside her mouth. Bursting
out to seep into a welcoming ear.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for Week 4 of LJ Idol ([community profile] therealljidol, Three Strikes season. This week's topic is "The axe forgets; the tree remembers."

I was serving hash browns when a cheerful voice boomed, "Alice? Is it you?" I glanced up and couldn't place the nondescript person in front of me.

"I'm Duffy Manfred*," he announced. "We went to school together in fifth grade."

How could I forget? He'd made me miserable that school year.

Every school dance, he and his friend Coby Wentzel* hung at the sidelines, catcalling. "Boom! Boom!" they'd cry as I grooved with my friends. "That's the sound of Alice's feet landing!" He made elephant sounds in the hallway to trumpet my arrival anywhere.

At the time, I was maybe 20 pounds overweight, if that. Photos of the fifth grade me show a girl in transition towards becoming a teenager: malleable, pliable, soft mounds still forming into grown muscle. Thanks to kids like Duffy, I spent years hating my perfectly normal body. When he moved away, just before seventh grade, me and my nerdy friends held a dance party at our cafeteria table.

But now I was a college sophomore, who'd changed the spelling of my first name, the "Y" symbolizing rebirth as the person I was meant to become. I was working over the summer in the East Halls cafeteria, catering to the camps being held on campus. Duffy proudly told me he was a counselor at the Special Olympics camp, for special needs children.

I wanted to vomit. I wanted to report him to his superior, tell the camp director they'd hired a bully. At the very least, I wanted to confront him; let him know how much he'd hurt me.

But I sensed that would only take me backwards, into depths off pain I'd spent years shucking off. Besides, I reasoned, the fact that he was now a counselor for a camp like this, maybe it indicated that he'd changed.

So instead, I shrugged and said, "That was a long time ago, but you do look vaguely familiar." I nodded at the next person to hold out their tray, and Duffy awkwardly shuffled along, out of sight.

alice-tree-circa1982
Me at about age 12 next to a tree in my backyard.
I'm wearing a soft striped sweater in pastel pink, purple, yellow and white stripes.
My belly is a little soft, but I otherwise look tall and healthy, someone growing into herself.
I'm hiding my face half in shadow, my large glasses covering half my face.
My wavy dark blonde hair falls to my shoulders.
It astonishes me how much my son looks like this now (but slimmer).
I tell him every day how handsome he is.
I hope he hears me.




* Not the real name.

Originally posted on Livejournal
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for LJ Idol (http://therealljidol.livejournal.com), week 1. The prompt is "Black Rainbow."

Ship in Camden Shipyard

Black Rainbow

An oyster, hinged open in briny depths
to siphon seawater atop a flat, smooth stone
while brackish bubbles, like smoke, drift upwards
along the iron links of a chain
yoking a lead anchor to distant surface.
Above, barnacles bedew the soot-crusted steamer,
its glossy obsidian hull absorbing all.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
I'm going to be participating in the new upcoming season of LJ Idol! I'm planning on posting on Dreamwidth, crossposting to LJ.

This week, I'm dog-sitting my sister's adorable doggo, Leia. Here's a video from yesterday of us (sort of) having a dance party.


Dancing with a Doggo
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is an entry for LJ Idol Minor Plus. This week's topic is "Thanks for Giving," and you can read the other entries here: https://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1108602.html. I've had a rather busy week, so instead of writing something new, I'm going to share a previously unpublished piece from 2013.

2013 Thanksgiving Alyce & KFP
Me and KFP at Thanksgiving dinner in 2013.
(I'm wearing an orange V-neck sweater with white blouse
and brown faux leather jacket. He's a plump-faced little dude
in an orange polo with a blue and white checked button-down long-sleeved shirt
as an extra layer. I've got my arm comfortingly around him and am inclining
my head down towards his little dark-blonde head.)



My attitude towards possessions has changed drastically since becoming a mom. In the three years since giving birth to my son, I've lost an iPod, two voice recorders, and my wallet. I've even had dreams about misplacing my car, but so far that, mercifully, hasn't happened. I suspect that's largely because my son tends to be inside. After all, my increasingly feeble mind still manages to remember him, if nothing else.

Ask any mom: if faced with the choice of dropping her squirming baby and dropping her phone, she'll let the phone hit pavement. (At this point, I'd like to nudge all parents-to-be to invest in an extremely durable phone case; you'll need it.)

While I was never terribly materialistic -- during my extended "hippie" phase, I didn't even own a television -- these days, absolutely nothing matters as much as my little boy. I rarely buy books or CDs anymore, unless they feature dinosaurs and trains. I'm embarrassingly overdue to go bra shopping, and my shorts are falling off, now that I'm finally losing my baby weight. Still, about 99% of my clothing purchases over the past several years have been for my son.

Of course, he's changed in size more rapidly than I have; until this past January, I was stuck in my postpartum squishy state. Admittedly, it's also more fun buying clothes featuring cool cartoon characters than trying to figure out what works on my new, "improved" body.

As a work-at-home mom, my contribution to the family finances has decreased rather than grown. Now that we have three people to feed, clothe and keep happy, I'm fine giving my son the majority of new (or slightly used) things. I feel like I owe it to him, since he's new here.

Of course, if advertisers had their way, I'd be spending far more. The minute you get pregnant in the U.S., you start receiving messages -- both subtle and overt -- about all the things you must acquire in order to make sure your baby is happy and safe. Sign up for one parenting or pre-natal site, and your inbox is flooded with advertisements for the latest baby gear: from necessary items like onesies and car seats to frivolous ones like video baby monitors and motion-sensitive crib mobiles. When you sign up for a baby registry, you guarantee not only that your friends and family will know exactly what you'd like to receive but also that the store knows exactly which items you'd most like to receive coupons and promotions about, and which related items you might be talked into purchasing, alongside them.

Not that there's anything wrong with that: I mean, unless you're planning on hand-knitting all your child's clothing, toys and bedding, you're probably going to want to buy a few new items. Don't let me talk you out of that. In fact, just the opposite: indulge on a few really cute items you can't resist; but don't forget that your little bundle of love will only be able to wear that adorable outfit for a couple months. Then follow my brother's sage advice: take a picture of your kid wearing your favorite outfits, because they'll outgrow them faster than a sports car zips through a one-light town.

This is why so many kids' wardrobes consist primarily of classic staple items bought from the local used clothing store -- T-shirts, sweaters, exercise pants for boys, leggings and cotton skirts for girls -- and a handful of current clothes, provided by giddy grandparents and other family members.

The same goes for books. If your family is composed of book lovers, as mine is, you can look forward to receiving a library full of beautiful children's books. A helpful note: any books you want to keep in good condition should be placed on an upper shelf, because the rest of them will soon be gummed, chewed, torn and ripped. Experienced parents know to keep a roll of clear packaging tape handy in order to "fix" beloved books. While I'll admit that, as a book lover, it used to bother me to see my son wreak such havoc on his books, I now have an easy way to gauge how much he loves a certain story: by how much I've had to tape it back together.

Before I became a parent, I remember visiting friend's houses both before and after the advent of children. While none of my friends ever lived in houses worthy of "Architectural Digest," I noticed a similar trend with all those who had kids. The rustic farmhouse of one family went from quaint to quixotic, while the modern ranch home of another couple went from understated to cluttered. Rugs darkened, walls acquired smudges, and toys took over. In one case, a father of three rummaged through a pile of children's things to dig out his guitar case. And then, this longtime musician -- who's been in more bands than I've worn clothing sizes -- placed the acoustic guitar flat on the floor for my toddler son to investigate. I wonder if he'd ever have considered being so laissez-faire about his instrument when we met in grad school?

And right there is the marvelous revelation brought by parenthood: material things don't matter. They're fun, yes, and some of them are even necessary. But books are made to be loved, clothes are made to be outgrown (or in my case, hopefully, shrunk out of), and toys and games are made to be used. Children seem to sense, instinctively, what so many of us have forgotten: memories come from living, not from hanging back. And when he moves away some day, ready for his own life, I won't think about how much we spent on his clothes and other items. I won't mourn a broken toy truck or lament a torn book. No, I'll reflect on all the memories we formed together. Enthusiastically, fearlessly, with joy in our hearts.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for week four of LJ Idol Minor+, with the topic "Happy." You can read the rest of the entries here: https://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1107400.html

The Pony

One-handed, she leads you
across the twilit loam,
matching your loose gait.
You are gray as doves with
a mane of dried grass. She
is milk and treebark. Later
she will brush burrs
and pollen from your
flax; feed you grained
goodness and, sometimes
sing a lullaby. Though
you would call it a sweet
neighing, melodic
whinny calling you
to sleep's fields.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for Week 3 of LJ Minor Plus (http://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org). The topic this week is "Intaglio." There will be no voting. You can read the other entries here: https://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1105950.html

Cabin, print by Vivian Starr
Cabin with Mountains, print by Vivian Starr



Ways of Seeing
(for Vivian Starr)

Six years ago, my Mom collapsed
and woke in the spirit world. She left behind
her dreams, etched and inked, drawn
in chalky pastels, brushed in paint
across canvas and paper. I became
her art historian, cataloging
her work. She spoke to me
through process. Her sketches,
studies, and tests. Trying out
material, techniques.

Her lifelong love expanded
into print making. Block prints,
linocuts, monotypes. A lonely cabin,
carved into linoleum, used to create
both black and white
and full-color prints.

The black one, deep and pensive. White
flecks of grass, angled
and orderly fields, a massive
mountain range, rising ominously
behind a mysterious cabin, its uneven
walls, falling into its secrets.

The color print, lively
and inviting. The cabin walls,
violet as the mountain, ridged
against a triumphant cerulean sky.
Green fields behind a dried brown
expanse of grass. A violet
creek, with red highlights,
pulling reflection
from a red tiled roof.

Studying this linocut, I can see
her hands stained with tint, biting
her lip in concentration. In these moments,
she returns to me.

- November 15, 2021

My mother passed away on November 15, 2015, about a week and a half before Thanksgiving, still my hardest holiday.

Cabin in Summer, print by Vivian Starr
Cabin with Mountains, in color, print by Vivian Starr

alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for week 2 of LJ Idol Minor (http://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org). The topic this week was "Roopkund." You can read the other entries here:
https://therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1104538.html


skull



One sun-drenched afternoon, I'd been reading the collected works of Edgar Allan Poe in the living room of my childhood home. I was halfway through "MS. Found in a Bottle," the story of a man lost at sea, telling his final tale as he nears certain disaster.

The tale's narrator, whose ship was devastated by a storm, scrambles aboard a black galleon filled with useless, outdated maps and populated by elderly crewmen. He is certain they are destined for a dark end as he chronicles his experiences.

As the light poured through the gauze curtains, my eyelids grew heavy. Nestled on the comfort of the golden velvet loveseat, my eyelids fluttered closed, and the blue and green floral wallpaper dimmed, soon to be replaced by a muddy, undersea landscape.

I floated through murky depths, sliced periodically with silvery beams from the surface. Unable to move my limbs, I floated log-like through the seascape, soon realizing I was not alone. Surrounding me, the skeletal remains of hapless sailors populated the dreary expanse, in various stages of decay. Torn flesh, leathered and frayed, the brackish water blackened with congealed blood. Browned and ancient, the skulls grinned vacantly at me. Though my skin crawled and my brain repelled at the thought of touching them, I could not move away.

How long I stayed submerged, face to face with these specters, I do not know. Minutes, perhaps. Or eternal hours. At last, I awoke, disoriented, into the gold and green living room, which now seemed dim and cold.

Quite a specific remembrance, don't you agree, for a dream that took place nearly forty years ago, when I can barely remember the story that brought it on? But as countless dreams, and books, and memories, have receded into the acrid miasma of time, these sunken skulls will not desert me. They have followed me into other dreams, revealing themselves in rotted coffins, just underfoot, so that I nearly fall in. Always, in these bleak moments, I am alone in dank darkness, riveted to the abhorrent spot.

After long persistence, the skulls have followed me into the waking world, as well. While helping with a creek cleanup, after months of isolation in the midst of a pandemic, my gloved hands plunged again and again into a marshy creek, and I felt the skulls even then, staring eyeless through the ripples. I would not have been surprised if I had pulled up a jawbone, entangled in a piece of plastic, a snake coursing through the sunken eyeholes.

But nonsense, you say. Skulls cannot move. How could they follow you anywhere? Of course, I am afraid you may be right. Just like my dream self could not move away those eons ago, my mind has never moved away from those stony visages. An undercurrent to my thoughts, they've influenced me to watch forensic shows, and to ponder biology basics. I've even given my son an anatomic model of a skull, which sits in pride of place atop his bookshelf.

Genealogy, my preoccupation since losing my mother seven years ago, can be a litany of loss: the neat dates marking the bookends of a life. I'm a lurker in cemeteries, prowling the aisles (never atop the graves) to read the names and wonder about the lives those bones once lived. I've visited some of my ancestors to leave rocks on their tombstones. On one, the earth was so soft, I nearly fell in, and laughed an unearthly chuckle.

I wonder, sometimes, if I have ever truly awoken.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
I'm pleased to share my first blog post for Mommy Poppins!

https://mommypoppins.com/newlin-grist-mill-glen-mills-kids-visit

I'll be writing pieces for them on things to do and places to visit for families in the Philadelphia area. This first blog is about a place we loved to visit, which stayed open even during lockdown last year, with strict social distancing provisions. It was so good to have a place we could visit and enjoy nature, outside of our apartment grounds.
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
For those who don't know, I maintain a fitness blog at Livejournal (renewmom.livejournal.com). In case you're interested, I just posted there about my progress since May 2020.

https://renewmom.livejournal.com/28461.html
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for [community profile] therealljidol. This week is an open topic, so I chose to write about something I've been thinking about a lot, ever since publishing a piece by actor Raymond J. Barry in Wild Violet where he mentioned his mother was also gay.

Wait a minute. Did she just say
my son looked gay? In his Navy blue
pea coat, his red and black tassled hat.
His chosen winter get-up at age 5.

An elderly acquaintance observed, If I'd
put that on my sons, they would have told me,
'That looks gay, Mom.'
Stunned, I wonder:
Should I mention that my Mom
was gay? I just answered, They shouldn't
talk like that.
Marked her down
in my book of who not to trust.

My mom, the artist, the gardener, was deliberately
nondescript. Blending into small-town
life, with the female "friend," who just happened
to live with her. Living like
a fugitive, hiding in plain sight.

In the 1960s, she'd wanted a family, impossible
for a single woman, let alone
a lesbian. She chose the simplest answer:
to pair up with her cheerful fellow clarinetist
that she did love, for a time, if her own
hand-written diary entries can be believed.
My dad: optimistic, gentle and supportive.
She didn't lie to him. He just thought
he could change her.

As a kid, I demanded traditional holidays.
Carols and hot chocolate at Christmas.
Santa, cookies and milk. Trying
to fill a gap I couldn't articulate. Hoping
if we behaved like a storybook, the pieces
would fall into place.

When I was in high school and my parents
separated, I felt strange relief. Tension
evaporated, my parents becoming
friends, as perhaps predestined.

I remembered Mom telling me about Uncle Harry.
He'd been gay but married her mother's sister anyway.
She'd always taken glee in this story. Always
seemed sneaky to me. Fine for Harry,
but what about his wife?

My siblings and I took note of a new friend
who acted furtive around us. Took off
suddenly when I came downstairs for water
and an aspirin, to find them sitting in the dark.

One bright autumn day, Mom and I
zipped down country roads in her hatchback.
I have something to tell you, she said,
eyes welling with tears. Her face flushed red.
I'm gay, she near whispered.

It's all right, Mom. I've known for years. And your daughter
wears Army boots,
I said, propping my feet on the dashboard,
clad in Vietnam issue swamp boots. This scene
became one of her favorite stories.

Raised in a world where shame and scandal
followed truth, my Mom did what she could
to secure the life she wanted. We kids,
her enduring loves. Not exactly her fault
her rescuer kept hoping the maiden would
finally fall for him.

Happily ever after can be
complicated. No black-and-white endings
in a full-color world.

Vivian Starr with KFP
My mother, Vivian Starr, holds my son soon after his birth.

alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
I learned this weekend that someone I've known for over 30 years, Chuck Shandry, suddenly passed away. I've posted in memory of him at my literary magazine, Wild Violet.

http://www.wildviolet.net/2021/02/21/remembering-chuck-shandry
alycewilson: Photo of me after a workout, flexing a bicep (Default)
This is my entry for this week of [community profile] therealljidol (LJ Idol Survivor). The topic this week is "You Shook Me."

As I punched in at the blue-plated metal time clock, Alistair* strode toward me with his long legs, intoning my name with a sing-song pitch that could turn anything into an insult. My skin crawled.

I slipped my time card back into its slot as quickly as I could, intent on slipping away to the dish room. But I wasn't quick enough. He stepped in front of me, asking me with a sneer what I'd done last night. It felt less like small talk than an accusation, and I didn't understand why. Something in his tone turned a simple question into an interrogation.

Alistair towered over me, his square jaw set in his long face, his limp brown hair falling in his eyes beneath the white dining hall cap. I wanted nothing more than to get away from him.

"Have fun in the dish room," he snarled after me as I scurried away. "I'll send some dirty trays your way." Alistair was a busser, which was a coveted position. Unlike the dish-room people, who were rooted to our spots and spent our shifts wearing plastic aprons that got splattered with other people's half-eaten food, he wore a clean white cloth apron and bustled about the dining hall, filling empty soda machines, and bringing clean racks of dishes and glasses from the dish room into the dining area as needed.

This evening, I was stationed in the dirty section, where we took trays from a conveyor belt, banged them over a trough, and placed them in racks to go through the automatic dish washer. Usually, I preferred the clean side, where you pulled the steamy-hot dishes off the automatic line and stacked them in rolling boxes to be delivered to the food line. Tonight, however, I was glad to be thumping dirty plates over a trough, because it meant I wouldn't have to deal with Alistair.

Whenever I was stacking clean plates, every time he passed through, he found a way to get in my face. He'd "accidentally" bump into me when my back was turned, so that I was in danger of dropping the heavy, stoneware plates and breaking them. While we didn't have to reimburse the dining hall for broken plates, we did have to immediately shut down the line and clean up the broken shards. Fortunately, I'd never dropped one, but that was no thanks to Alistair.

If he wasn't physically invading my space, he was staring me down with a predatorial gaze, throwing off a sneered comment, sometimes half-heard in the din. At least, when I was bullied in grade school, I'd had options. I could run away, or find a friend, or rush to class to sit in my safe assigned seat. But working here, I was locked into one location, designated by the manager to stay a sitting duck for the entire three-hour shift. And since the dish-stacking station was for a single worker, I didn't even have witnesses.

It had gotten to the point where I dreaded coming to work. Each time the weekly schedules came out, I frantically scanned them to see if Alistair was working with me. If he was, my stomach turned itself in knots for hours before I had to turn up. I thought about quitting.

One night, he was waiting for me outside the locker room, right after I changed for my shift. "Nice pants," he snarled, gesturing at my baggy red jersey pants, which I wore because I didn't care if they got covered with hamburger bits and salad dressing.

"Whatever," I threw back, walking briskly past him down the empty hall.

"Why are you walking so fast?" he asked. "Afraid of me?"

Yes, I realized. I felt a desperate need to put distance between myself and this man. My fellow co-workers had already gone upstairs to clock in. I'd been delayed because my locker wouldn't close right. Would anyone even hear me from down here in the basement, through the thick, brick walls and concrete slab floors?

As I picked up my pace, he did, too. My legs no match for his stride at walking pace, I began to run. He picked up the pace, too, and my heart sank into my stomach.

"Stop running!" he yelled. He was only a few steps behind me. In another few paces, he could have grabbed my arm.

As I turned a corner, I nearly bumped into Laurie from the Cook's Help station. We often worked together in Cook's Help at Saturday breakfast, where I got to work with food on the more appetizing side of the process. Even though Laurie and I didn't normally chat much, I cheerfully asked how she was doing. How was the Art History class that she loved to talk about? I steered her into conversation about the Renaissance period as we walked up the steps to the hallway behind the kitchen where the time clock resided. Frustrated, huffing loudly, Alistair ambled past us. He turned to throw me a glare as he passed.

I dallied with Laurie near the time clock, asking her if she'd be on shift Saturday, making chit-chat about the weather, until Alistair had no choice but to proceed to the Busser's closet to pick up his apron and check the clipboard for his tasks.

Dropping my card briskly into its slot, I called "See you later" to Laurie and walked with purpose down the hallway to the manager's office. Knocking on the light-wood frame of her open door, I asked, "Can I talk to you?"

Mrs. Hanlon++ had always intimidated me, with her no-nonsense attitude. Her ash-blonde, straight hair pulled into a long, shapeless ponytail, her large rounded glasses perched on her aquiline nose, always wearing a baggy suit in nondescript earth tones, Mrs. Hanlon clearly had no time for frivolity. Nothing so pointless as a smile ever crept across her thin lips, at least not in my months of being her employee.

"Yes?" she said, with the air of someone who had just been interrupted from something terribly important.

My hand trembling involuntarily, I took a deep breath and muttered quietly, "It's about Alistair."

Mrs. Hanlon's stern visage melted subtly, and I saw concern creep into her eyes. "What about Alistair?" she asked.

"He's -- he's been bothering me," I confessed.

Gracefully, she hopped to her feet, gesturing me to take a seat in the blocky wood upholstered chair in front of her desk, as she swept to the door and closed it with a quiet click.

Back in her seat, she said simply, "Tell me what happened."

The words tumbled out of my mouth: the threatening air he exuded, the way he hovered around me like a vengeful ghost. (In those days, I didn't know to call it stalking.) I ended the saga with, "I didn't know if I should say anything. He never threatened me, or made sexual jokes, or hurt me. I didn't know if it qualified as harassment."

She said simply, "It's harassment if it makes you feel uncomfortable." Reassuringly, she told me she'd take care of it. She promised me that he'd talk to him and that, if he ever did it again, she'd fire him on the spot.

I exhaled.

In the weeks after my talk with Mrs. Hanlon, our schedules changed. I rarely, if ever, got a shift that coincided with Alistair. When I did, he looked through me as if I didn't even exist, briskly walking past me, all business. I still got a sinking feeling in my stomach when I caught sight of him, but at least I knew I was no longer alone. Mrs. Hanlon had my back.

~~~



Though I rarely think of Alistair any more, I think of Mrs. Hanlon every time the issue of harassment surfaces. I've repeated her words to many people who may have needed to hear them: "If you feel uncomfortable, it's harassment." And while my memories of the exact details of what Alistair said and did to me have faded like a long-ago scraped knee, I can remember the exact quality of light in Mrs. Hanlon's office that afternoon. I can remember exactly what she was wearing and how her face softened, looking at young adult me, a little wavy-haired 19-year-old, trembling in the late afternoon golden sun through her many large windows.

Because of Mrs. Hanlon, the moment that shook me did not break me but only shored up my foundations.


*Not his real name

++ Not her real name


Penn State Mall Climb 1990
Me participating in the Penn State Monty Python Society's Mall Climb in the spring of 1990 with (left) Damon Buckwalter and (right) Pete Uoth. I don't have a lot of pictures handy from the time this story took place, so it's sort of ironic that the one I do have shows me loosely tied to Pete. I assure you, though, it was consensual, and he and I were just friends. You can see he carefully kept his hands in his pockets.

UP-Findlay Commons by ATS 2012
Findlay Commons at Penn State in 2012, before renovation. It looked like this when I worked there in the late 1980s to early 1990s.

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