This is the summer not like all other summers. This is the first summer of non kids. I mean I do have two home, one from college, the other just lives here. I have one visitor daughter who pops in every few weeks from colorody way.
It started with not going to the fair in May. I don't know why that was a big deal, it's just a hot cement place with sheep you can touch and it smells like burning meat. But I loved that tradition. I would take them out of school to do the fair, and disneyland, once a year. This year nobody was home to do the fair. The fair and its kettle corn went on without me. No one pulled the rope to make the steam engine whistlescream and scare the shit out of people. We didn't have the snack stroller. The drawstrings of my life, they are unravelling sir.
Before kids I never went to the fair every year. Okay my mom did take us to the state fair in Maryland where we ended up picking up a man for her at the bobo booth. The one where the guy is sitting over the dunk tank of water, insulting you until you throw a ball at him. Need a baaaalllll player, he would drawl. We stood in front of that booth for so long because the jokes were so funny. Who would think an alcoholic poised over a tank of water with little or no education and no real dental care (just guessing) would be so funny with dry jokes. We ended up on a state fair kick for a few months, going to different fairs to follow these guys around and listen to their jokes. Comedy is a seductive mistress my friend. There must not have been enough comedy in Maryland.
We ended up taking that first guy home. Billy Redgate. He was my first alcoholic if you don't count my grandmother. First alcoholic I ever lived with, let's say. I was 13, we lived on a river in Maryland in a rented house, I slept downstairs and everyone else was upstairs. When I got off the bus and walked down to our house, if I heard Sweet Home Alabama blaring at full blast from our house, I knew Billy was drunk.
Billy was 21. I thought that was ANCIENT. My mom was 38. I thought they were the same age basically. Old. My mom drove a fast car, was crying most of the time from her divorce, and now we had Billy at our house, her first (of many) male diversions. I did not know what alcoholics were, but I did know that by night time, there was alot of screaming. All of it by him, not us. None of it made any sense. He told me he would go to my barn and poison my horse so he would be dead next time I saw him.
The next day I was at my barn and Billy came in with some flowers. He said he didn't mean what he said. He was gentle Billy, the one who could be so funny hoisted above water. I looked at Billy over the stall door, with my chestnut gelding Zeus still alive and chewing hay next to me. It was the first time I realized that people could be liars.
Also Billy wasn't my problem, he was just upstairs and making alot of yelling at times, but really he was not in the realm of me and my brother, and even my mom. He was just Extra. He was never going to stay forever. The fairs only stay a month at most.
So my kids growing up did not have the same fair experience as I did. We actually just pet the sheep and ate ice cream and watched the pig races, I kept everything rated G because a kid should have clear bliss for as many years as they can. The Billy thing did not add to the understanding of my life, it just was a curious eyebrow knitting to me. I thought maybe we were going to follow the fairs around forever, until we found the right prince. The jokes were so good, and the lights were so colorfully flashing. And I had my buddies, my mom and my little brother, he was only 9. We were always floating in our own boat, above the world, there was the sea, and there was us 3. I never thought anything could really touch us.
I think the goddesses wrap you in a special cloth when your dad and big brother are far off, and nothing can prick through it, not a diaper pin not a dagger. If life barfs at you, you just rock one way or the other and it passes right by. Later on you will unravel, when you can unwrap yourself and see all the heartache you stored up being wrapped so tightly. The goddesses know, that you needed the protection. They don't leave you any instructions for how to unwrap yourself or how to manage the rest of your unruly emotions the rest of your life. I suppose that is how we all grow up, untangling, overwhelmed, enthralled, dumb in the reality of how huge life is when you are a real live person, exposed raw to this little earth and your singular self. This is why we gather in clans. We wear animal skin and stay warm and go to the bagel place or Palm Springs and make smores and we feel safe inside walls because we already know there is so much we can't know or understand outside because we are whipping through life before we can grasp it. We can only grasp the tiniest fraction.
That's how a one day at the beach trip every week in June and July helped make the summer feel real. That taking a day off to go to disneyland and the fair helped us mark growing up years. That seeing our people at dumb parties over and over helped remember and celebrate how rich all their faces are.
