Tuesday, June 30, 2009

God bless the broken road that lead me straight to you...

What a weekend... I feel like I owe you, dear readers, a bit of a break from all the saaaaaadness and heaviness presented here at ...but we're making good time. Indulge me though with another post o' musings about love, family, friends, and how much we truly do all need one another.

Spent the weekend in Chicago for the Out of the Darkness Overnight Walk. Clearly this had the potential to be sooooooo depressing (it *is* all about suicide, after all). But trust me when I say this - I've not laughed this much in a very, very long time. We're talking purple Gatorade out the nose, snorting into your napkin, spitting your beer onto your dinner-mates, real-live tears on the cheeks, and even a touch of peeing your pants kind of laughing.

You know who you are but I'll list you here for posterity all the same - Molly, Lisa, Ally, Sawnia & Tommy - thank you thank you thank you for, once again, reminding me that the choices we make and the people we surround ourselves with really can have outstanding outcomes. This week coulda been sucha bummer, so heavy and intense. Instead, it was filled with what I'm learning just might be the keys to happiness in this life:
  • Hard work - oy, my aching bones and back today!
  • Good food & drink - mmmmmmmm, those snacks & beers by the river on Sunday afternoon were the tastiest morsels of all time, with or without Miracle Whhhhhip.
  • Old friends - no, not just Tommy 'cause he's *actually* old... but the kind of people that have been in your world for a while, that have gotten to know you well, but stick around anyway. The ones you can share a hotel room and a bathroom (or a porta potty) with and still like each other all the same. The ones we can literally survive 24 straight hours awake together with and still speak both kindly to and about one another.
  • Tough conversations - the ones where you are able to say what desperately needs to be said. To bring up the hurt and stare it in the face so that you can maybe start to get past it, to put it all properly behind you, and not just put the lid on that box.
  • No words at all - those moments when just sitting next to someone is about all you can muster, and you hope and pray and beg that that's gonna be enough.
  • Laughter - true, from the gut, crack each other (or just yourself!) up, we're all so tired that we're clearly delirious laughter. Damn if my cheeks and belly don't still hurt from all that laughing.
My plane is boarding so I can't finish or edit this properly... just know that we all gave our best selves this week and I love you each like crazy for it. In an incredibly bassackwards way -- I'm grateful for the losses that brought each of you into my life. Where in this world would I be without you???


Wednesday, June 24, 2009

January 16, 2003

Not sure how to intro this one, so we'll get right to it. I wrote this about two years ago for a memoir class (disclaimer - haven't edited any of it since so be kind). Since I've not been able to post much this week, and since I'm heading to Chicago today for AFSP's Overnight Walk, I thought now might be a good time to share it with a wider audience. Oof - this one's a little tough, brace yourselves...


----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The phone was ringing for the third time that morning. It wasn’t yet six-thirty and I’ve never been an early riser. Twice already Amy had called to ask questions about my car, which she was borrowing for a bit. With the third crack-of-dawn call, I assumed she couldn’t pop the trunk or some damn thing.

“Now what?”
“Miss Wheat?” an unfamiliar voice asked, “Cari Wheat?”
“This is she.” This wasn’t about how to use the windshield wipers.
“This is officer Droban with the Sahaurita Police department. Did I wake you?”
“Yeah, but that’s all right – is everything okay?”
“Are you sitting down Miss Wheat?”

Now I was completely awake; jolted by the dawning that something awful had happened at home. It was, in fact, as if I’d never been so awake. My family lived in an armpit corner of Arizona known as Sahuarita and a police officer from there wanted to make sure I was sitting down before talking to me in the wee hours of the morning. Prep yourself kiddo.

“I’m sitting, what’s going on?”
“I’m afraid that both of your parents are dead. It appears that your father shot your mother in the head as she slept and then turned the gun on himself.”

*****

The time between the phone call to end all phone calls and getting home to Arizona was exactly the whirlwind one might expect. Thank God a dear friend lived just one flight down from me in San Francisco and was a light sleeper. What Nicole must have thought when she woke to find me pounding on her door, drenched in tears and handing her a credit card. “I need you to buy me a ticket to Tucson, for today.”

Within an hour, we were on our way to the airport; me leaving bizarrely calm messages with work and family and she trying to figure out exactly how to ask if they were both really gone. In my blubbering I hadn’t been clear about how serious the situation was. She was hell-bent on going with me, of course, but I was too petrified of what I was walking into, what we might find, to subject anyone else to the nightmare. These were the same instructions I gave to Lisa, in Phoenix, when I called to convey what had happened and that I was on my way home. “Don’t come down Lis, it’s too crazy and I don’t know what’s going on yet. I promise, if I need you, I’ll call.”

My 23 year old brother Josh found them. Two o’clock in the morning and a bit tipsy from a night out, he hit the hall switch only to bathe our father’s broken body with just enough light to forever sear that image into his brain. When the police arrived on our block of Placita de Laton, Josh had to be restrained and held in the back of a squad car; such was his terror and panic. How he lived through trying and failing to wake our mother, I don’t know. He will never, ever be the same.

I’d been in and out of the Tucson airport at least two dozen times in my life, but the desert had never seemed so abandoned. In a place that enjoys 350 some odd days of sunshine each year, there was not one leaf on one tree and not enough sun to turn even the saguaros green. It was as if everything surrounding them had died too. Once together, Josh and I spent what seemed a wounded eternity sobbing and propping each other up on a friend’s couch. We had no idea where to start or what to do first.

Fortunately, Lisa has never really listened to a word I’ve said and she was already in Tucson, in case I changed my mind about needing help. Josh, rightly so, couldn’t face going back into the house and yet there were things we had to gather, papers to track down, valuables to sock away, answers for which to scrounge. There was no way she was going to let me tackle that alone. Before I knew it, I had a house full of girlfriends sorting through the 31 years of my parents’ life together and managing to find laughter amid the heart wrenching new reality along the way.

*****

As far as we could tell, my folks never threw one single thing away. It seemed to my small army of girlfriends that trinkets from each vacation and photos from every happening were neatly packed away in one corner or another of the house. The Christmas decorations alone took up half the garage, not to mention Valentine’s Day, St. Patrick’s Day, and a perennial favorite, Halloween. Each was well represented in paper and ink, plaster and ceramic. Kirsten unearthed a lifetime supply of gift wrap under their California King-sized bed. Every imaginable occasion was accounted for in wrapping paper, ribbon, gift cards and those insane little purple wristband tape dispensers. Mom could’ve been a Boy Scout; she was so prepared.

Important things, naturally, like wills and insurance papers were nowhere near as well organized. Additional proof, I decided, of how unexpected this was. Titles for cars were in a nightstand but proof of insurance in dad’s desk. There was one file cabinet overflowing with things that seemed important but could have just as easily been recipes or old grade school papers. I took back what I said about mom’s preparedness. Things like jewelry were just as random. Stored in ice cube trays we found earrings that ranged from what could’ve passed for fishing lures to impressive, dripping gold nuggets, all sharing the same scattered space. What the hell?

*****

Neighbors stopped by, presumably to express their sympathy and to offer assistance. Not so in Sahaurita. In a community that bantam, the neighbors were standard-issue busy-bodies and were only nosing around to find out what had happened. They asked questions designed to soothe their own distress, not to offer relief to any of us. One claimed to be terribly close with my folks yet was surprised to learn they had a daughter… doubtless he’d ever spoken with them or been in their home.

No exaggeration, every last inch of the walls was covered in family photos. My friends took great delight when assigned the task of taking them out of the hundreds of rickety old, mismatched frames for easier storage. This gave way to howls of laughter as progressively older photos, each with bigger hair and more awkward ‘phases’, were unearthed behind the more recent shots under the glass. One series of precariously naked photos of my brother as a toddler broke the tension in the most well timed and needed of ways.

One miracle of a neighbor did stop by on day two. She and her young daughter were weighed down with potato salad, cold cuts and the most amazing chocolate cake any one of us had ever tasted. There was also sweet tea, and all the paper plates, napkins, cups, knives, and forks they could carry. She didn’t ask even one single, awkward question. Rather she said only this:

“If I were you, I would be freaked out, scared and unspeakably sad. But I would also be hungry and I certainly wouldn’t want to do any dishes.”
“I made you this card,” added the girl as she handed over her glitter-encrusted masterpiece, which I immediately soaked with grateful tears.

These two made all the other nosy-neighbors melt from memory. I couldn’t find the words to tell them how wonderful a gift they were sharing. Sometimes angels appear in the midst of chaos; they’re the people who just know the right thing to do.

*****

Josh stayed with good friends while Lisa and I bunked at a nearby hotel, courtesy of her younger sister, a Marriott employee, who sent her love the best way she knew how. “Tell Cari I’m so sorry for every time I was ever a troll to her.” Lisa couldn’t help but grin when she passed along the message. I would find, in the coming weeks and months, that everyone showed concern and affection each in their own unique ways.

*****

The house carried a mortgage that I was now responsible for on top of my astronomical San Francisco rent, so I was on a steady course of readying it for sale as soon as possible. This was not our childhood home; I’d spent but a handful of nights there and Josh crashed there only because he was too ‘laid back’ to get a job. There was no heartbreak at the thought of someone else sleeping within those walls. Once we’d tracked down anything deemed important for settling estates and the upkeep of family history, it was time to set aside items with purely nostalgic value. The rest would be sold at auction; the awful kind where they leave everything exactly where it was when the person died and strangers wander through, absentmindedly looking for bargains in the remnants of a life left behind. We filled my brother’s room with the keepers: bronzed baby shoes, a cedar trunk stuffed with wedding and prom dresses, countless photo albums and slide trays, the Little Women dolls from mom’s childhood, the roll top desk from dad’s, and tchotchkes from both their world travels.

“The monkey mold!” I announced to the girls - still dutifully sorting through books, records and, as a special treat for one of them, an entire bureau of craft supplies - that we had to find the monkey mold. Understandably, they had no idea what I was rambling on about.
“The monkey what?”
“The monkey mold,” I mustered my last scraps of patience as panic rose in my throat, “We’ve gotta find it. It’s silver and yay big.” Could we find one small, specific thing in this pack-rat haven?

My parents called me “Monkey” as a kid; a symptom of perpetually climbing on anything bigger than me. As a result, each spring the Easter Bunny produced, not a hollow, drugstore chocolate bunny, but a solid, deliciously heavy chocolate monkey. I thought the little rabbit an eavesdropping genius, how else could he have known? Having cottoned on in later years, I would wonder where my mom bought them, with our many moves, even as far flung as Alaska and Australia.

On my twenty-fourth Easter the annual basket didn’t arrive and therefore, tragically, neither did a chocolate monkey. At the time, I pressed my mom about it and she said she thought she’d given me the mold but found it too late, still at her place. Mold? She’d been making them?! Every year, without fail, she’d hand made this clever inside joke of a personalized gift. It epitomized how she lived and how she loved and if I couldn’t find the monkey mold now, I knew I’d never stop feeling this loss.

With mounting hysteria, I tore through the kitchen in search of this piece of my past, this weird and suddenly life or death connection to my mother. Luckily, as with the holiday decorations, everything had a home in her home. I found the damn thing amid an impressive array of cake decorating supplies in the pantry. This served to remind me that she had also faithfully made each of us birthday cakes depicting our latest obsessions: jukeboxes, basketballs, Raggedy Ann, race cars.

I haven’t cast it in chocolate yet, but I have the monkey mold now and it will ever remind me to do tiny, personal and consistent things for the ones I love.

*****

The months to follow were a blur: scatter their ashes, say something appropriate, sign a tornado of papers, hire lawyers and real estate agents, clear out the house, let everyone they’ve ever loved know the news in a gentle way, answer letters, pay all those bills, remember to eat, face mom’s kindergarteners because they’d all seen the six o’clock news and this was a huge headline in a small town, collect insurance, get some sleep, store everything with meaning or value and sell the rest, try to make sure everyone else is keeping sane, stay afloat at work, don’t lose your mind.

*****

As a result of them hoarding every single thing they had ever owned, I found a secret gift in the house that helped put in perspective the chaos. In the bottom of a closet, in an overstuffed plain brown envelope, were letters. Not a trite note of explanation from my dad, but love letters from their first months together. My folks met in their twenties while each traveling around Australia. I would later be born there and my brother and I would spend our childhoods straddling two continents. They knew each other two months and then married and celebrated their 31st anniversary fifteen days before they left this world. We would have happily celebrated another every January until their natural deaths, should living any longer been an option our dad could have considered. The found letters were from those first few months when they were both still traveling but missing each other sorely. They couldn’t stand to be apart and so married and created an amazing, if all too short, life together. I plain never met another couple that was more in love.

It’s that same love and devotion that I take as explanation for why dad took mom with him. Three decades later, he still couldn’t face time without her. The only bright spot of no one knowing what really happened, is that whatever explanation I choose to believe becomes my reality. For better or worse, there is no one left to correct my theories.

*****

Aside from the inexplicable monkey mold panic, I’ve never gotten around to fully losing it, never completely broken down. I haven’t let myself feel what transpired and I still don’t understand or believe that they are both gone, forever. Maybe it’s too enormous to actually wrap my mind around; I don’t think anyone can feel that weight and that loss without collapsing in on themselves.

Instead, I know that I was strong and resilient only by the grace of inspired friends who know precisely how to love. As always before, and particularly following January 16, 2003, each shone brilliantly in his or her own way. Nicole made the painful phone calls and did her best to be brave. Amy filled my fridge with mac n’ cheese and my vases with fresh flowers. Lisa rallied the troops and got shit done. Jenny got me to answer the tough questions and to make decisions. Dan crossed the country to sit with me and to hold on for dear life.

For these gifts and for every day since, I thank each loving friend. They are my chosen family and, as is so often the case, they are much better at it than the family into which I was born. I will never be able to repay those moments of clarity, those unselfish acts of kindness. Truly, I hope they never need me to, that their lives are each blissfully tragedy-free. Since I know that’s likely not to be the case though… I stand at the ready with food and phone calls, patience and laughter for when I know, first hand, that they’ll need it most.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

It's a love without end, amen

I talk a lot about Chosen Family -- and about how mine has been and continues to be the reason that I'm not balled up on the floor in a puddle of tears and slobber or davitting (sp?) in a corner somewhere. Sometimes this gets the intended laugh; usually just makes folks even more uncomfortable than when we started... suppose there are two kinda people in this world.

Annnnnnnnyway - since it's Father's Day, and since I'm not willing to get very sappy about my own Dad (please, we'd be here all week), instead I have a list of the Dads in my life that floor me with their open arms, their strong hands, their kind and wise words, their persistent flaws, their generous spirits, their giant laughter and, of course, above all, their never ending love.

Here we go - in no particular order (disclaimer for the competitive amongst you - you're all outstanding!):

Josh, Laine, Garry, Rick, Frank, Ben, Matt, Jim, James, Bob, Duane, Dick


and of course, Curt.


Friday, June 19, 2009

Home, where my thought's escaping

Have been thinking a lot about Home lately. Maybe it's 'cause I don't really have one at the moment, or because I feel so completely at home in so many places that it's impossible to choose. Not surprisingly (because none of this surprises me anymore) I read these lines on the flight to Denver (my possible future home) from New York (my most recent and still possible future home):

Humans, even nomadic ones, need a sense of home.
Home need not be one place or any place at all, but every home has
two essential elements:
a sense of community and, even more important, a history.

Huh.

It's clear that we can consider me a nomadic human. And I'm certainly blessed with a sense of community - in both quantity and quality I find myself loved and supported by this unbelievable chosen family of mine. You know who you are, and where you are (why we're not all living together on our collective tropical island just yet is unclear... who's in charge here anyway??). But I digress.

It's the history bit that I struggle with... what does that mean? A cultural history - I got no people to speak of, do WASP's count? A religious history - ditched that a while back. A geographical history - please see my above request for us all to live on one tropical island together rather than scattered the world over. So what then, where is my history? And without it, will I never, ever, ever find Home?

No answers, no revelations tonight. Just wondering out loud and trying to be open to what those answers might be. Until they come to me - the search continues, and below are a few criteria that I'm starting to focus on, in no particularly pressing order:

1) Be able to see stars, lots of 'em
2) Close to the ones I love - and some sort of possibility of finding The One that I love
3) Plenty of people that don't look, sound or think like I do
4) A wide variety of food options - preferrably b/c of all those different peeps above
5) Plenty of people that think *exactly* like I do
6) Porches (stoops count, so do wraparound verandas)
7) Walkable sections of town, where you can get everything you need while out wandering about
8) Long windy roads nearby
9) Trees (real ones, with branches and leaves, not arms & spiky needles)
10 ) The kind of place that people want to visit, again and again and again


The pix below are just some of the houses we lived in as kids. All of them Home, none of them meeting all the criteria above... will try to dig up more pix of places that have felt like Home since.

My first home - Alice Springs, Australia

Alaska
Camp Verde, AZ
Wickenburg, AZ
Wickenburg, AZ




Thursday, June 18, 2009

How I hate to see you go

Dear New York - How do I love thee?

Am feeling a bit mixed-up about leaving NYC again today. Some of you have stopped me mid-sentence recently for clarification when I'll say that I'm "heading home" or "was just home"... the clarification needed because, well, where exactly *is* home these days? Who can say friends, who can say? Again, I'm just not authorized to answer these questions.

"Maybe that's all family really is... a group of people that miss the same imaginary place." ~Garden State

While that doesn't exactly address where home is, it gives you a feel for why I'm still looking. Turns out, home may also be imaginary, that's all.

Back to New York, which is technically the latest version of home - since I plunked down the money for an apartment in Hell's Kitchen 3 years ago and I've lived here for going on 6 years now (nearing the record rivaled only by San Francisco, for those keeping score). I don't think I have the guts for New York anymore though. I certainly don't have the patience for it. Slowly, slowly, the pluses of 3am Gang Garee Gai Thai delivery are being outweighed by the minuses of sidewalk trash collection and the never-ending smell of pee. Sick.

So, once again, I'm seeking a new home; the current front-runner is Colorado. The mountains are, well, they're so fucking amazing that I can not stop cursing about them, the guy:girl ratio in Summit County is 10:1, people are healthy 'cause they're outdoors all the time, not 'cause they live at the gym, and I've got some seriously good peeps in the area. What else could I possibly need? Thai food in the middle of the night - yes. The Subway so I can have unlimited drinks with dinner - true. But I feel good about making the next move, about trying on a new home for size. Who knows, if this one fits, you might be able to commit some space in your address books for me, in pen. Hmmmm - let's not get crazy now.

... unless of course that OEM job gets in the way. If that happens, then I'll need to find a way to renew my love affair with New York. You can be sure I'll be taking suggestions.

Werkin' for a livin'

Am getting lots of (lovely and sweet) questions along the lines of - What the hell is going on with you, where are you living, what are you doing, are you working, what in the world??? I'm not at all able to answer most of those questions but, here's a quick recap for those who aren't quite keeping up --

Have been a'job hunting for about a year now since leaving my increasingly frustrating (and once beloved!) event production gig in NYC in April 2008. The thinking was to take all that logistic-y-ness and apply it to some sort of disaster relief/humanitarian aid work. Right?

To be fair, I seriously let the search slip - a product of things falling miraculously into place. Freelance here, contract gig there, take time to visit and play with otherwise neglected friends and fam that I love and miss, blow it all off and go to Costa Rica, skip winter by hiding out in LA for a stretch... you get the idea. I managed to piece together work, travel and a roof over my head (by swapping my apartment) so wasn't incredibly motivated to get down to the business of looking for work.

And then...

Turns out, that "plan" ain't gonna last forever. Boo. So I got serious about the search, dolled up the resume, crafted clever cover letters, and have been applying for things right and left, far and wide - 57 submissions in 3 months (yes, I'm keeping track; yes, there's a spreadsheet). Rumor has it that there are 8 million-ish other people also looking for jobs these days. Thanks W! No one has ever accused me of good timing.

So I sucked it up and applied for an AmeriCorps VISTA posting in Denver. Aaaaaand - last Monday I was hired to spend the next year creating a disaster preparedness training curriculum for non-profits across Denver, so that they can keep their doors open in the event that one of those recent tornadoes really does touch down. Whoop!
* Good experience - check.
* In Denver (where I'd rather be, sorry Lis) - check.
* Fantastic contacts for the next phase (ie: a real job in disaster relief) - check.
* Don't have to start 'til July 21st so still have a smidge of play-time left this summer - check please!

And the best part?! I'll make a whopping $936/month for all that hard work. Wait, what? Yeah yeah, some of you just lost all confidence in my sanity, I know. Did you read the part about the 57 jobs I've already applied for? $11,232 a year is $11,232 more than I was headed towards anyway... plus, it's all about the SERVICE people, the service... is no one else listening to Prez Obama??

OK - this quick recap is taking too long, but here's where it gets good & confusing.

I accepted the VISTA gig on Monday June 8th and packed my bags for a quick visit home(?) to New York (more on that later). On Tuesday, June 9th all bets were off. On Tuesday I got a call from NYC's Office of Emergency Management for an interview (that's the Holy Grail peeps, or at least a close runner up the the actual Holy Grail... FEMA). An Interview! Well, this changes everything... clearly.

What are the odds?
* I've been away from New York for more than a year and would only be back in town for a few days, the perfect window for when they were interviewing,
* I've been applying for jobs at OEM for-EV-er but applied for this opening just two days before they called,
* I'd *just* accepted another gig...

I'm not gonna believe in fate again, am I? Sooooooooo, the interview was a couple days ago. I have absolutely nothing to report from it 'cause it was the. strangest. interview. ever. So -- now we wait. The plan is for all decisions to be made and all staff hired by June 26th. Check back for more updates, I'll be sure to keep the weirdness and the coincidences coming.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

What does that mean?

OK ok ok... you've been asking for it for some time, and so here it is -- a blog, regular(ish, please, let's be realistic) updates on the Tour de Cari, on mi vida loca. Why anyone, save the 2-3 of you who are already love me and just can not get enough, would read what I have to say is beyond me... but I do like to give the people what they want, so here we go.

Getting started here...

OK, gonna write something now...

Dammit.

All I can muster today is an explanation for the name ...but we're making good time. My Dad luuuuuuved him a "shortcut" on road trips, and there were many of both for the Wheat's - road trips and shortcuts. Most involved a great deal of extra time, a dash of getting lost, and a handful of painfully strained bladders. So, often on some woefully abandoned road or another, he would say "Looks like we're lost... but we're making good time".

In many, many ways I'm loathe to admit this - but I will for you here & now - those trips and those shortcuts were clearly the early foundations of my own wanderings, my own "shortcuts", and my own desire (drive?) to try a different road, turn down that unmarked path, and to actively get good and lost on my way to wherever it is that I'm supposed to be going.

So, even though not one of you who knows me would expect it, and even though I can't recall a single time when I've ever said these words, I'll startle us all by saying it here -- Thanks Dad. Thank you for letting your own lost & frightened soul live on in at least one good way. Because I assure you friends - I *am* lost... but I'm also making excellent time.

Welcome aboard y'all, buckle up.