Tuesday, March 31, 2020

1 Quarantine, 3 Places




1.

I think of Maria as a contemporary, although she is Llara, m daughter's age, an alumnae of Boston Latin.

Although we didn't meet at the time, we've walked the same streets, seen the green grass of Harvard Medical School yard. We were probably on the E Arborway Greenline at the same time. We might even have had an ice cream at Sparr's Drug Store sitting side by side. Over a six year period it is more than likely.

My connection with her was the relatively recent result through another BLS graduate on Facebook, Rossi. I thank him for the connection.

She now lives in Spain and has a daughter older than she and Llara were at BLS. I became an avid reader of her blog https://spanishviews.blogspot.com letting me dip into her life where I feel the change of seasons and the locale. I see a part of Spain, I might never have known.

2.

I've watched Robin metamorphosis from a grief-stricken widow, struggling to rebuild her life. My first knowledge of her was a photo on her birthday in front of L'Hostalet's fireplace from the back. What struck anyone about Robin was her hair to her bum. She had a wonderful assortment of hats to protect her from the summer sun in the square.

What a contrast we made when my hair was growing back from my chemo baldness.

Her hair now grazes her shoulder, but is till beautiful.

She melted into the camaraderie of ASM, coffee at the boys (owners of the l'Hostalet) on market days, wrote her heart out, produced exercise videos and took up skiing again.

We cheered her finding a new love when she was ready and is now ensconced with him down the street where we can all hear the 7:05 church bells ring and ring rather than just the quarter, half, three quarter and hour dings.

Her blog https://salleyjrobins.blogspot.com 

3.

People overlap: an American connection, living bilingually, creatives. We three bloggers do.

We are all quarantined because of the Corona virus. We all blog it.

Each morning, I hope Maria and Robin have done a blog.

Our focus may vary from comments on the rules and regulations, the frustrations, the chance to slow down and truly see what we rushed by pre-quarantine, entertainment such as sharing virtual reality tours, food and photos. No topic will be eliminated from our fingers touching the keyboard.

If the French and Spanish quarantine regulations vary, the results are the same. We are constrained in our movements. No longer are choices limited by time, energy or money, but by government decree.

In other times it might be war that limits us, but now it is an invisible virus. There's a combination of not wanting to be one of the fatalities, not wanting to be fined, jailed, or carry the disease to someone else.

Women often share many experiences, we bond, laugh, cry, share: we pick and choose things in our lives that we talk about like falling in love, marrying or having a partner, parenting, a career, loss, fear, doubt, education. We may read the same books, write, paint. We plan out our lives and sometimes our plans come to fruition. Other times events carry us down totally different paths.

I think it is safe to write, that I doubt if any of us planned to live in a quarantine.









Isolation?

Isolation?

Not at all. 

Yes we are allowed out with a purpose and a dated and timed form for an hour. And yes we see neighbors also darting out for bread and victuals and we call to them from across the street.

Ca va? we say. Ca va, they answer. We ask about  (     ) who lives with them. How are you holding up? One neighbor comments on Rick's improved French, and he comes home chuffed. 

The police will tell us not to be too close together. I want to tell them we share a bed. If one of us gets the virus the other will, I'm sure. C'est la vie and hopefully not la mort.

"Where will we go today?" I asked my husband as I got out of bed this morning. Even the dog has slept in. "A tour of the snore room, a walk around the drying clothes in the entry or maybe a strut in the dining room?"

Most likely we will visit the laptops and TV and of course the kitchen. We are cooking more filling the house with good smells at least around lunch time.

Once at the laptops, we are no longer alone. People come in via Facebook and email. There's:
  • Pam from Ireland, 
  • Kikka, Alexander, Louise, Camilla from Denmark
  • Andy, Pauline, Carol, P, Barbara from the UK
  • Carol and Gerry, Sylvia from Australia,
  • Ruth, Lannie, Adrian, Margaret, Bill, Millie from Canada
  • Ro, Kay, Alan, Tracey, Robert, Geoff, Keith, Becky, Barbara, Don, Terry, Sherri, Bruce, Nicole, Glenn (2), Gretchen, Richard, Mike from the US
  • Robin, Lydia from our neighborhood
  • Fanny, Paul, Mary from France
  • Julia, Scott, Alistair, Daniel, Anil from Switzerland 
  • Barbara from Monserrat
  • Karrie from India
It's only a partial list, and I haven't added in our daughters. Llara appears on messaging every few days and we share the webcam to admire her cats and Sherlock, discuss her WFH and any other topic that we would discuss if she was in front of me to share a pot of tea.

Politics, books, humor, personal news and more are battered back and forth.

Sometimes, I get so caught up in emails and Facebook, I never get to my own writing. I haven't gotten to the stack of mail, but even if I deal with the paperwork and mail it, no one is there to open it.

And if the internet connection wearies us their are books. Fortunately we have a supply and if we run out there's Kindle. I've read five books since the lockdown plus I'm catching up on three months of The New Yorker.

There's the Washington Post, Guardian as the base papers and at least six other international news sites. For TV News we check France, Switzerland, England, Scotland, US, Canada.

We are still part of the group fighting FATCA, but much more relaxed at the moment. We still check to make sure what is happening.

I don't feel isolated at all.



Monday, March 30, 2020

The same not the same

T'was rainy and raw this morning.

Usually Rick takes Sherlock on his first walk. Because I wanted to be in the grocery as it opened, I opted to allowed him to snuggle in bed...no need both of us to be up early...my pleasure to do so in gratitude for all the times he does it for me.

The toilets in both our French and Swiss flats are on the opposite ends of the flats, something that in the middle of the night can be annoying, definitely a non real problem with all the world catastrophes.



As I walked through the village, it dawned on me that Sherlock, who has his favorite dumping grounds usually several blocks from the flat, has a similar situation. No backyard to pop into.

His morning's choice was the parking lot grass, several blocks away.

The dog and I were the only other humans around. The air was cheek nibbling cool and smelled fresh. Overall, a nice experience.

In the grocery store, I picked up what I needed to make corn fritters for lunch. On the way home, I saw Elisabeth unlocking her green grocers. "Not until nine," she said. No problem. Some strawberries later may be good. So nice to have everything we need in walking distance even in lockdown. However, we still need to fill out the required form each time we leave the house, including date, time and reason.


Ba ck home I crawled back into my heated bed, still dressed in tights and sweatshirt to read Paris Wife, a novel from Hadley Hemingway's point of view. Usually, we are up by 9:00 at the latest, but between reading and snoozing I next looked at the clock exactly at 11:00. I had just reached the part where the newly married Hemingways sailed for Paris to join Pound, Fitzgerald, Stein, etc. A perfect time to start the day.

I feel smug that I have walked the same areas where they lived. Last night Rick and I felt smug. We were watching Czars, the episode where Rasputin was murdered. A few years back, thanks to a Russian friend, we had stood in the room where the monk met his end.

Our world has narrowed drastically since then to about one kilometer geographically. No more standing on historic sites, perusing museums, playing golf courses, eating in restaurants. Our human contacts are limited to chats from balconies, air kisses with a street between lips.

Our days at home, however, are similar: reading, riting, and no rithmetic. In its place we contact the world through our computer. Eating well for what we prepare ourselves.

This is not a complaint, but an observation. I am healthy, my husband is healthy, our relatives are virus free. 

It is enough.

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Dressing in the time of Corona




    How many of you in lockdown dress each day? Not talking office dress, but nice jeans, sweats, etc.


    1. This is the only male that answered. Not sure if I am allowed to comment here, but I have not changed the way I dress because of the lockdown. Same clothes every day, and I'm currently re-considering that no-deodorant-necessary policy. (everyone else is anonymous...this is the love of my life and he doesn't smell).
    2. Nope. I will get out of the pajamas, but I am enjoying living in sweat pants.
    3. I always shower and dress (I’m locked down with a husband who does the same) and put on earrings and lipstick. It makes me feel good to be dressed nicely, even if I spend most of the time on the computer.
    4. You know me - yes - but then again I have a stylin’ guy. I’m not going to let him outdress me!
    5.  I do. Was even thinking about changing my clothes for dinner -- just to pretend. But so far I haven't done that…this woman lives alone. 
    6. I do! Still getting dressed, wearing my earrings and spraying a little perfume. No real changes.

    7. I have to. I don’t want to shock my home working son-in-law.🤣

    8. Moi. As a writer whose been in "lockdown" with writing projects over many years, I always do my hair, make-up& dress as if I'm going to work. Earrings too (Bra too! (I know... I'm nuts.)

    9. I shower and dress ...casually. No make-up and bra.

    10. I shower and dress casually but definitely get presentable for the day at the computer. Looking for words for a children’s book. 

    11. I do albeit sometimes not till midday...but up showered, hair washed, blow dried, dressed and even earrings and perfume before 10 am..got a Skype coaching call in a mo

    12.  I realize I feel better when I put on make up. I’m teaching on line - students see me but I don’t see them so have to make up then. Video very unflattering... 

    13.  I've always thought we dressed and did our hair etc. for ourselves. Feels good to feel "put together." 

    14.  Guilty as charged 

    15.  Good question. Yoga pants are wonderful. When I teach online, I try to make an effort with a little make-up, but I have worn workout gear during the lessons. No one seems to notice. :-) 

    16.  I haven't changed habits. I bathe at least every other day. I wear the same clothes, but not necessarily the same two days in a row. If I'm sloppy cooking or gardening, of course laundry is necessary. I don't wear makeup and I hardly ever wear earrings. 

    17.  I thought it was always for others. I went to modeling school and we were drilled in looking impeccable every day. As I get older I do it for myself. 

    18.  (From a friend caught in a lockdown in India) How funny you should ask that - just Today as I sat on my balcony doing my Isha Kia. Meditation -with my lipstick on and my prettiest sarong draped around me –… Yes I still make the effort… Nature never gives up on her beauty so why, thinks I, should we

    19. haven't changed habits. I bathe at least every other day. I wear the same clothes, but not necessarily the same two days in a row. If I'm sloppy cooking or gardening, of course laundry is necessary. I don't wear makeup and I hardly ever wear earrings.

    20.Not this kid, unless I'm in a video conference and then it's only made up from the waist upward.

    21.I change PJs every three days. Does that count?
    1
     

Saturday, March 28, 2020

The Goldfish


The Goldfish


From age eight Anne-Marie sought refuge from her parents' loft in the calm of Sacre Coeur. The odour of incense and candles smelled better than the oil paint. The choir sang sweetly unlike the raucous debates in the loft that was their home.

"She's the white sheep of the family," Anne-Marie's mother said.

"Must be your side." Her father referred to his wife's brother, a priest. 

Anne-Marie watched from her mattress as her mother gave a face shrug, pursing her lips, lifting her eyebrows and pushing her chin forward. The child touched the triptych of the Blessed Mother.    
       
"We'll hide it from your father in this box," her mother had said when the icon arrived and had rearranged the screen providing limited privacy in the room that served as home and studio.

 *****

Despite her begging, Anne-Marie's parents refused to send her to convent school. They did pay for a secretarial course after she passed her bac. By then they'd given up trying to interest her in painting or poetry.

*****

For her first job at France Telecom, Anne-Marie bought a blue suit and several scarves. The clothes didn't make her half as happy as the chance to fill pristine paper with neat words and numbers. She arranged pencils like a marching band and placed paper clips on the square magnetic holder she'd bought on sale at Mono Prix. Sliding open the desk drawer, she stuffed the divisions with letterhead, second sheets, forms and envelopes.

Intrigued by her computer she asked Jean-Claude from data processing to borrow manuals. She studied them page by page.

After that, anyone needing help was told, "Ask Anne-Marie." Although she knew which buttons to press, she wondered why they worked. After praying for courage, she asked Jean-Claude. 

"Take a programming course," he said. Three days later he dropped an evening course announcement in her in-tray. She enrolled. When there was an opening in data processing, she applied and was hired. No problem was too complicated for her. 

She and Jean-Claude ate together often. "I wanted to be a nun," she said.

"Why don't you?" he asked. 

"My parents."  

She noticed he'd lost weight. One night while working late, he started crying. 

"What's wrong?"

When he told her, she made a decision.

After Anne-Marie's parents met their future son-in-law, her mother said, "He's translucent."

"He looks just plain sick," her father said. 

Anne-Marie said nothing. 

"We never thought you'd marry," her father said.

"Unless you became a bride of Christ," her mother said.

Anne-Marie still said nothing. 

 *****

They didn't share a marriage bed. Jean-Claude slept in a hospital bed decorated with intravenous bottles and an oxygen tent. The paraphernalia rested in the center of his living room, making a detour necessary to turn on the television.

France Telecom allowed Anne-Marie to work at home. She changed sheets, washed sores and sent her latest program through her modem. The only reasons she left his apartment were to run errands or to go to church. 

He rallied so often that the pattern of crisis and recovery no longer aroused hope. During the good times the couple drank tea from bowls, listened to music or talked. Although she wasn't that interested in politics, she repeated comments she'd heard from her childhood. Jean-Claude would nod in agreement.

The night his former lover died of the same disease Anne-Marie held her husband as he cried. She felt his almost naked bones under his skin, she wondered how much longer he could go on. He fell asleep across her lap. It took him six months to follow his lover. 

She kept his apartment. Each night when she returned from work, she walked around the hospital bed that was no longer there. The shelf that held medicines now had laundry detergent, bleach, Monsieur Propre, furniture wax and lipstick She couldn't bring herself to touch anything, so she bought new cleaning products and stopped wearing makeup. 

Her parents invited her to dinner on the first month anniversary of Jean-Claude's death. When she arrived, they were so caught up in work they'd forgotten to cook. Her mother threw a stew together. The three of them dipped one spoon into the pot. Her father had used the last soup bowl for his palette. 

"Want to sleep over?" her mother asked.

Anne-Marie glanced at her old mattress piled with her father's canvases and paint supplies. The privacy screen had disappeared long ago.

"No, but thank you."

"You're alone too much," her father said.

"I'm getting a pet," she said. Until that second the idea hadn't entered her head. She'd written to an abbey in Limoux but wanted to give herself time to adjust to Jean-Claude's passing before making any major life decisions. "Maybe a bird that sings."

Walking through a pet store to buy a bird, a flash of gold caught her eye. A fish, one of fifty or so, pressed his nose to the glass. He was slightly different than the rest. He did flip flops.

"Fish don't need much care," the salesgirl said. She tried scooping another out, but Anne-Marie insisted on the one that had done aquatic acrobatics.

She put his bowl on the divider separating the living and dining areas. Two floor-to-ceiling windows on each side of the divider looked out on a small park.

"What shall I name you?" A photo of Jean-Claude when he was healthy stood on her desk next to a geode. As Anne-Marie looked through the bowl the reflection of the light and movement of the water made it look as if her late husband was walking out of an amethyst cave.

"Jean-Claude Junior," she said. She shortened his name to Junior and figured by the time the fish died, she'd be ready to enter the abbey.

*****

Five years passed. Junior needed three replacement bowls each larger than before. The last dominated the divider.

Her routine pleased her. She went to Mass mornings before work. Her neighbors, an elderly couple, invited her to dinner Wednesdays. She watered their plants when they went to England to visit their daughter. They feed Junior when she took a holiday. 

Most nights she arrived home by eight. Junior watched her set the table. She never ate from a pan but used china and cloth napkins. When she finished, she'd reach into the cabinet to get Junior's flakes.

One night as she dawdled over her herb tea, she heard a tapping. Junior batted his head against his bowl. It must be my imagination, she thought but looked closer. He hit his head against the bowl again. Then when she gave two shakes of food into the bowl, he swam in two circles before eating.

The next night Anne-Marie waited to feed Junior to see what would happen. He tapped. She responded. He's trained me, she thought, and said, "Your welcome," when he did his circles. She started chatting with him regularly.

"I'll be back around seven. Be a good boy."

"Today is Saturday, I'll be home all day."

"I'll iron in here to keep you company."

"There's a Depardieu movie on France 2 or we can watch Thé où Café.

When Anne-Marie added a plant to his tank, he started playing peek-a-boo with her. She always felt he thought he'd won, but she wasn't sure of the rules.

Maybe he cheated.

*****

"You need to get out more," her mother said on one visit. At work, Anne-Marie's female colleagues complained that their mothers would come and straighten things up. Anne-Marie's mother always left a mess.

"It's not healthy only working and living with a fish. "There's a new artist your father met..." her mother said.

"Mother!" Her tone said the last thing she needed was another artist in her life.

"My mother actually tried to play matchmaker," she complained at work to Elisabeth, another programmer. "I can't believe it."

"Mothers are like that," Elisabeth said.

Anne-Marie invited Elisabeth to dinner. On the metro, Anne-Marie explained about Junior.

After coffee, Anne-Marie waited for Junior to tap. Nothing happened. Just as Elisabeth was about to leave, she said, "I'll feed him anyway. You'll see how he does a double circle." After the flick-flick of her wrist, Junior went right to the flakes. As soon as Elisabeth shut the door, Junior tapped and circled his tank.

"Brat." Anne-Marie turned out the light and went to bed.

*****

Anne-Marie's parents came to dinner the third Thursday of each month. In November eleven years after Jean-Claude died, she served rabbit in wine sauce and potatoes seasoned with sage. Her parents had long ago given up complaining about her flowers, matched Limoges dishes and Finnish crystal wine glasses.

Before they ate, Anne-Marie moved the yellow roses, which she'd bought in the metro station, from the center of the table to the mantle. The reflection in the mirror doubled the bouquet.

"C'est bon." Her father kissed the tips of his fingers then wiped the last bit of sauce from his plate with bread. "You're an angel of a cook." Anne-Marie blushed.

Her parents were dressed in their usual jeans and sweaters. Her mother's hair, salt and pepper wild curls springing out of her head, hid most of her back. Her father was egg-shell bald.

As he raged against Sarkozy's election, her mother arranged the cheeses: brebis, Roquefort, chevre and a gouda with cumin while her father uncorked a burgundy. Each person broke off a portion of bread which less than four hours before had been in the baker's oven. A sampling of cheese, a bit of bread, a sip of wine fuelled a communion cleansing.

"I'll never understand you," her father said. Junior paced up and down in his tank.
"You don't have to, Papa," Anne-Marie said. "Think of me as a black and white linear minimalist." For the first time she felt at ease with her parents.

Her mother looked at her daughter. "That is almost poetic."

Junior tapped twice.

When her parents left, Anne-Marie fed Junior, put a Bach sonata on the CD and turned on her computer. She worked long after midnight.

Before she went to bed, she said her rosary. In the middle of the night she woke and decided to go to the abbey at Limoux for a retreat. Maybe her sense of peace meant that she was ready to become a bride of Christ. Junior would just have to do his antics for the couple upstairs.

*****

The abbey was next to a field of flowers with a separate chapel. Inside the abbey she was given a cot with the crucifix on the opposite wall, a rough dress and scarf to hold back her hair.

The sisters walked the corridors and garden paths without speaking, the silence broken only by birds and footsteps. It matched Anne-Marie childhood imagination. The quiet left her mind careening between childhood memories and programming problems rather than the prayers she should be concentrating on.

After lunch on the seventh day of her planned two-week stay she slipped into the grey stone chapel. It was narrow and buttressed in a style she knew was medieval. Despite the heat outside, the stones felt cold against her knees.

She began her rosary. Halfway through the third Ave Maria she looked up. Two plastic round lights hung from the ceiling. It was the first time Anne-Marie had noticed how out of place they looked. Anne-Marie finished her rosary.

The next night she left the convent, bought a bottle of white wine for her parents and another for the couple taking care of Junior.

As she came out of the Metro and could see her apartment building, she knew she was home.

In this short story, I wanted to create a character different from her family (conflict) who comes to terms with who she is and why by having her face certain situations. This story was published in  Whiskey Island Magazine Spring 1999