Showing posts with label spring equinox. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring equinox. Show all posts

Saturday, March 20, 2021

The Dead - Spring Equinox 2021

 

In the midst of a global pandemic that has claimed over half a million Americans lives, I have been thinking a lot about the dead. One of whom at least peripherally is mine.

 

Nearly nine years ago, I sat listening as my father died. Two days earlier, I had received a call. He needed me to come over right away. Hospice was on site and they wanted someone there to help take care of his wife until her son could arrive when the inevitable happened. My stepsister-in-law had assumed that duty until she had suddenly departed a few weeks earlier for reasons I wouldn’t learn until I had a chance to speak with her after she came back with my stepbrother.

 

A few hours after I got there, my father slipped into unconsciousness, to return only once and only briefly. The hospice nurse said this was pretty typical. He was waiting for someone to take over responsibility so he could let go. I only had a couple hours to talk to him and confirm his arrangements and final wishes, which included cancelling my sister’s longstanding debt to the estate at my request. It didn’t benefit me (in fact it cost me), but did make life easier for my stepbrother. He would have had to enforce it, which would have been less than pleasant.

 

Over the intervening two days, I spent a great deal of time on the phone updating distant family. My aunt had already said her goodbyes to my father months before, and sadly parted on less than perfect terms, although not as bad as my stepsister-in-law. I talked to my stepsister-in-law and got increasingly evasive answers about the timing of their arrival which I only later understood.

 

I stressed to my sister that if she wanted to see our father before he died, she didn’t have much time. I was being told days at most. Theirs was yet another in a string of dysfunctional relationships within my immediate family. And yet, if she’d said the word, I would have moved heaven and earth to make sure she would have gotten to see him. I knew how to make that happen. I knew it might be important to her later. She declined to come, a decision I think she would later regret.

 

The next two days were kind of surreal. I had never witnessed anyone die before. Hospice told us exactly what to expect, down to the physical changes to look for that said the end was imminent. But they stressed that these were only indicators; they didn’t provide an absolute timeline. There are no hard and fast rules with dying, just strongly coincident trends. So, we waited as we listened to my father’s breathing change and watched his fingernails turn increasingly blue.

 

Because of the layout of the condo, hospice had set up his hospital bed in the living room, just by the sliding glass door that looked out onto the lagoon. Between that and having at least one and sometimes two hospice nurses there, along with my stepmother plus the two of us, his dying felt public, like he was on display. I am certain he felt that, too, from our final, brief conversation.

 

To give my stepmother as much privacy as possible, my wife and I spent most of our time either in the breakfast nook off the kitchen, where I reviewed a proposal for adapting a story of mine, or in my father’s spare bedroom office sorting and arranging all the documents my stepbrother might need later. He was the primary executor on the will and on the trust. He would be responsible for what happened to his mother, although she and my father had come to an agreement on what that would be. Because of her own long-term health conditions, she was unable to take care of herself so was unable to stay in the condo. She would die in a facility in Missouri less than three months after my father.

 

None of which really mattered when his final moments came. The previous evening, the night nurse had given us the heads up that the end was very near, under twenty-four hours. She would wake us if he began to change. He didn’t before the next morning when the day shift nurse took over and the unit supervisor showed up. They both reaffirmed the night nurse’s assessment. He wouldn’t be among the living much longer.

 

By nine that morning, all we could do was watch, wait and listen. My stepmother in her recliner, facing my father’s bed. My wife and I on a couch along the opposite wall, facing her. The hospice staff at the bar by the kitchen, trying to be discrete and give us what distance they could while staying close enough to witness and log his death when it happened.

 

The TV wasn’t on, which was unusual for my stepmother. It was May in Florida which meant the windows were shut because it was by then AC weather. Off and on my stepmother would get up and walk over to peer down at my father without saying anything, then return to her chair. For a short time, I sat by him and whispered reassurances that it was ok if he wanted to let go, and other words I will not share. The hospice nurses told us that he may or may not be able to hear us, even in unconsciousness. Near death experiences indicate hearing lasts until the very end, even after all other senses fail. I don’t think I was the right person to comfort him, but I was the one there.

 

For a long time, no one spoke. There was nothing to be said and really nothing to be done. We were all waiting for the next phase of the process which we knew couldn’t happen until after he was dead. Then we knew there would be a flurry of activity, the official parts of which, like contacting the mortician for pickup and assisting in getting a death notice in the paper, the hospice workers would handle. I knew I had a number of phone calls to make and had to plot out the proper order of who to call first, and who to ask to pass the information to who else down the chain to avoid as many hurt feelings as I could.

 

But that would come later. At that moment, we sat in an eerie silence broken only by one of us occasionally shifting position and my father’s increasingly ragged breath. At some point, I realized that we were all purposefully still, frozen, anticipating. Somewhere in those final minutes, I started counting the seconds between his breaths, which got longer and longer as time wore on. First a second, then two, then five, then ten. Each intervening pause of silence eventually interrupted by another sometimes sharp, sometimes struggling, sometimes almost startled intake of breath. I think the last pause I counted was twenty before the hospice supervisor called his death. By then, her words came as a relief.

 

Because I had been beside him when that moment of transition came, I never had any trouble accepting my father’s death. While I had some unresolved issues, as most people do, I understood he’d had his time to say anything he wanted to say to me. He never did. But I didn’t dwell on it as we both had our opportunity. In the end, of his own two kids, and his wife’s two, I was the one he called to take responsibility. The youngest of the four. The one he knew would go to bat for his wife with anyone against anything no matter what happened. I guess to me, while that didn’t say everything, it said enough. As I talked about in “Dead? Dead.” it took my stepmother a little longer to process his death, which, while completely surreal at the time, was not abnormal, especially for someone in her situation.

 

All of which came into sharp relief last spring.

 

Just before my wife’s birthday, I received a phone call from my sister. My mother was dead. She had been dead for an indeterminate period of time, which turned out to be just over two days as the hospital searched their records for any point of contact. Neither my mother nor her caregivers had given one when she’d been admitted to the hospital. No one had called to let either my sister or I know. No one had called any of her local friends.

 

Two months earlier, my mother had stopped answering my calls. I suspect because she mistook my concern for her well-being and my inquires as to whether she was getting everything she needed during the pandemic lock-down as “checking up on her”, an accusation she’d leveled during another health crisis eight years earlier, at the same time my father was dying, when she was in and out of the hospital and rehab on a bi-monthly basis. Our relationship had always been complicated. By this point, I would categorize it as somewhat estranged.

 

With the pandemic, as well as for other reasons, I didn’t help clear out her apartment. So, I didn’t have that stark marker as a confirmation of her death. I only had the initial silence followed by a series of increasingly agitated and recriminatory phone calls from my sister. Another complicated and strained familial relationship.

 

Three years earlier my sister had fought tooth and nail to become the executor of my mother’s estate to the point of subverting even the people who tried to help her make that happen. When the time came, she refused to take it up. By then I was in no position to. But I went out of my way to share all the information I had with her, and guide her as best I could, and then legally resigned any interest in my mother’s estate in favor of her. When things had started to slip sideways with my father’s estate, I had offered to do the same with my stepbrother so my sister would get a full share. Which in hindsight strikes me as equal parts misplaced loyalty and an overdeveloped sense of responsibility.

 

Or maybe it was just part of my unique grieving process, in both cases for something more than just losing a parent, some of which had happened decades earlier. The loss of a childhood, the loss of a family, the loss of any possibility of salvaging any of that, the loss of any possibility of acknowledgement of who I was or what I’d become. The loss of any and all illusion. All the remained was the present slipping moment by moment into a troubled, murky past.

 

Either way, when my sister became so upset by having my mother’s ashes physically near her because she thought they were cursed or possessed and couldn’t deal with them, I told her to mail them to me. Not exactly what I wanted, but not new territory for me either. My stepbrother had sent me my father’s and my stepmother’s ashes eight years before because he and his brother didn’t know what to do with them, and thought I might. So, I knew how to handle it.

 

Accordingly, as we’d done with the other two before, my wife and I scattered my mother’s ashes in an appropriate spot and wrote up a description of what we had done for my sister, my aunt and cousins, and my mother’s few remaining friends, and took a couple of pictures. By then, stealth burials had become a tradition in my family. It seems like that should have laid the matter to rest for me.

 

But it didn’t.

 

I have spent a great deal of the intervening time convincing myself that my mother was really dead. Some of that faded briefly when I scattered her ashes. Watching what remains of a cremated human body pour out from a container is a visceral experience. But it is also abstract. A couple pounds of certified and tagged ash and pulverized bone fragments do not have the same gravity as a body. Intellectually, I knew they were her, that there was no vast conspiracy in which she could still be alive. And yet, below the surface, my mind wasn’t quite ready to accept that my situation had changed. That something I had dreaded for many years had come to pass, and that everything would be ok. In that moment, I wasn’t sure it would be, for reasons that would take a great deal of mental energy to sort out. Energy, which at that moment, I just didn’t have.

 

And due to the very strange nature of that act during the pandemic lock-down, that niggling feeling didn’t fully go away. I still found myself having to reiterate in an internal monologue that she was dead. I don’t think that’s because I was closer to her than my father. I wouldn’t say I was by the end. I don’t even think that it was fully because I was still afraid of her, though that certainly played a part. I think more it had to do with having witnessed my father die where my mother’s death was more remote both physically, mentally and temporally by the way the situation unfolded.

 

That reaction surprised me.

 

When my wife’s father died just over a year ago, her mother was somewhat insistent that she return home for the viewing so that she wouldn’t have trouble accepting it. As there was no way my wife was going to sit beside her unrepentant brother and pretend nothing had happened between them, or with the rest of her family, for even two hours of a visitation and viewing, that was never going to happen. As well, she had said her goodbyes the last time she had seen her father alive. So, she didn’t need to see him again with her own eyes to confirm that he was dead. She’d already set that picture in her mind.

 

I was fortunate enough to have done the same with each of my grandparents, so I knew what that feeling was like. There is closure in setting a final image in your mind beforehand, as I had with both of my mother’s parents the last time that I had seen them together, and then the last time I’d seen my grandfather alone. I’d done the same with my father’s parents, separated by a dozen years. I’d attended all their memorials, three of which involved trips north that I never want to take again by the way the family dynamics played out. Instead of reinforcing good memories of my grandparents, these trips fostered more familial trauma. I completely understood my wife’s refusal to do the same. Instead, she visited her mother several days after everyone else had left. Which, by the way, is something many grief counselors encourage to keep the situation from getting overwhelming for a new widow or widower.

 

As you can tell from some of the above, at the best of times death can be a messy business despite its mechanisms being pretty straightforward and simple. It’s complicated by we the living. The ones left behind. The ones who may or may not be able to confront the idea that everyone we know, everyone we’ve ever known, will eventually leave us behind. Unless we leave them first. Never mind our being willing to confront our own mortality.

 

Which may be why the rites surrounding death are some of the earliest human rituals that set us apart from other primates, and in general from all but a handful of other mammals. There is a primal mystery surrounding death, one which other species don’t appear to dwell on, or at least not to the extent that we do.

 

When we’ve had cats die, we have left out their bodies on the porch for a little while before we buried them in a kind of viewing to allow their housemates to see that they are gone. Usually, the living cautiously approach and sniff the dead, then look at us with a certain expression that is hard to interpret, and don’t go back. Only a handful who were very close to the dead call for their missing companion at night for some period of time, where they never called before. None have really searched the house to see where their friend had gone. It’s hard to know exactly what they are thinking or what they really understand. Something, from what I’ve seen.

 

Perhaps people aren’t much different. We just have more elaborate social ceremonies to help our fellows cope.

 

Different cultures have different customs regarding death. In some societies only outsiders are allowed to handle the dead. In others, only family. Preparing the dead is universal, especially washing and dressing or wrapping the body. Standing vigil over it until it can be buried, cremated or otherwise disposed of. Laying it to rest with treasured possessions, perhaps for use in an afterlife, perhaps just to honor their spirit or to keep them happy. We often mark the place we lay them to rest, sometimes with stones or shrines or other symbols, other times by using a sacred communal burial ground or just noting a private location in our minds. In modern western society, we send correspondence and make phone calls to notify friends and family of what has happened. We sometimes take pictures to share with others who could not be present. For legal reasons, we advertise deaths in papers and other public forums.

 

But most of all, we gather. We open our homes to visitations, to comfort and to receive comfort from family and friends. We feed the mourners, recognizing some have come long distances to stand beside us. We hold services and memorials. We hold wakes, not to wake the dead, but to be alert or wakeful ourselves. The veil between worlds is open. We are uncertain what might slip through in either direction if we do not pay attention. We share poignant stories and memories of the dead while trying not to speak ill of them. For some because we feel the dead can no longer defend themselves, for others because we are quite afraid that they can. We lay out the dead for viewings in funeral parlors or churches or other public venues, or sometimes in our homes on dining room tables, so people can confirm reality for themselves.

 

Dead? Dead.

 

Although many may deny it, almost all these rites and rituals are intended for the living, not the dead. Funerals are for those left behind. One way or another, the dead are beyond caring. Many people will also tell you the horniest they’ve ever been is after a brush with death. Those documented and quite psychologically normal experiences are as intense and intimate as they feel inappropriate. Life reinforces life.

 

There is solid anthropological evidence for why many of these funerary rites exist. One predominant view is that they provide a coping mechanism to channel our individual grief and other often mixed emotions (relief, guilt, anger, fear, etc.). Another is that they reinforce social coherence through group bonding as we support each other in a time of shared pain.

 

That doesn’t always happen. Death brings out either the best or the worst in people. Often both. But without those ceremonial frameworks, I think worse is more likely than better. Without set societal expectations and guidance, things are more likely to get out of hand in stressful times. Death is difficult, a mental shock. The scars from the living often linger.

 

There also might be pragmatic reasons that our ancestors stumbled upon as they codified their practices. Primitive sanitation. Dead bodies aren’t generally healthy to be around after a short time. Unintended consequences. The lye from scattered ashes gets clothing down river cleaner, or even acts as a primitive disinfectant. Communal safety. Standing vigil might have started as simply as keeping dangerous scavengers at bay, either animal or human. Unless of course you favor sky burials. But even then, that feast is ritualized and out of plain sight.

 

The most intriguing explanation I’ve read is that burial or cremation began as an attempt to literally bury or destroy the evidence of death. The anthropologist who advocated it traces it back to sacrifice (making sacred) often through scapegoating (casting the community’s sins upon a person or a creature), then killing it or banishing it and making it divine. Which he believes channels our inherent human violence to prevent our strong tendency as primates to mimic violence with further violence in a destructively escalating cycle.

 

He contends that many of the earliest burial sites we’ve found through archeology house sacrificial victims. Once the dead were dead, early societies wanted to hide the evidence of the ritual to prevent reprisals from erupting. The one way to do that was to make the victims holy after the fact, so their sacrifice could be honored as benefiting the community at large.

 

There is a counterintuitive resonance point here. In popular Christian culture (not strictly doctrine or theology), our dead are transformed into angels, by any definition divine beings, who then reside in an unearthly paradise for eternity. It is not difficult to deconstruct that myth into a near universal concept of paradise being a reward for enduring the suffering of this mortal life, which serves as a coping mechanism. Again, in popular Christian culture, some of those angels watch over us and guide us, at least if we pay them the proper respect, like visiting their graves, offering them small sacrifices like flowers at various anniversaries, and remembering them at other important family social occasions like christenings or weddings. When you pull it apart, that’s an abstract form of ancestor worship which has been widespread throughout various world cultures at one point or another in their history.

 

Or, if you favor a slightly different view, some of those restless dead may attempt to enact revenge upon us as reprisals for the slights they suffered in life. They either use small, mischievous acts, or dire visitations in our dreams or during illness, mysterious times when the barrier between physical reality and the spirit world is lower. Like gremlins or the ghost of Hamlet’s father. Should these dead be particularly jealous of the life in which they can no longer partake, they may seek to seize us while our defenses are down. From that perspective, we celebrate them to remind them that we love them. We inter favored items with them to bribe them, to keep them content in their graves. Safely entombed in stone or underground. Or diluted in water. Or dispersed upon the wind.

 

Almost any way you look at it, anthropologically the dead are potentially fearful forces that most sane people have no wish to offend. Best to hide them away in their own special area, out of sight. Close enough to visit, far enough away that neither side is inclined to casually make the trip. Not grouped together in so large a congregation of graves that we can’t hold our breath as we pass them by to keep some opportunistic spirit from stealing into us.

 

As a species, we prefer to imagine that somehow this life continues beyond the transition into death. I won’t debate any particular religious belief except to say they are ubiquitous. Most of us would prefer to imagine at least some of our dead in a better, more restful place, at the very least free of pain, though a few we might like to see receive righteous punishment for their accumulated misdeeds. Heaven and hell. Or more benignly, circling back to continue learning and improving through reincarnation. Even the most atheistic among us sometimes like to imagine our atoms serving as building blocks in creating new life even if not through conventional reproduction.

 

In other words, we construct elaborate illusions in the name of psychological self-comfort. Humans rarely let our dead rest or even fully let them go. Many people visit their dead. Many more talk to them. In general, I don’t do the former but sometimes do the latter. Just as I also talk to quite (presumably) living people who are not here with me. Sometimes I argue with both kinds although they rarely have epiphanies.

 

I think sometimes we believe we will get finally get straight answers from the dead once they have been freed from their earthly biases. But in general, the dead keep their secrets. Dead men tell no tales, at least not willingly. I think if we get answers, it is more often in our dreams, and then only because of our intuition processing events that we often refuse to accept while awake. Or through years of psychologically intense counseling, which often amounts to much the same thing.

 

Perhaps in burying or cremating the dead, we are merely trying to conceal our own grief, our own pain, whatever form that might take. Humans, like all animals, avoid pain in almost any way they can. Sometimes to the point of self-delusion.

 

Which leads me back to acceptance.

 

As I said, it quite surprised me that I had to remind myself that my mother was dead until just recently. I hadn’t felt that at all with my father, my grandparents, my uncle, a friend’s mother who helped shape me, or the best man at my wedding. Sure, I’d felt sadness and a similar sense of loss with some. I missed our conversations and correspondence dearly in others. But I never had to remind myself the situation was real. Normally, I would expect part of that with my mother was old trauma resurfacing, except I know other people who have gone through the same with a much more stable family history. Although they often felt differently about their dead.

 

The closest I have come to the feeling I had was with several of our feline companions who died. I think because I interacted with them more day to day, and so had to get used to a new routine that did not include them where they had been nearly omnipresent before. But with all but one of them since we’ve been in this house, we had a physical body to view and enough time with it for the situation to set. In the one case we didn’t, we eventually received a credible report of his death from a neighbor. Although before we did, we had a pretty certain feeling he was dead.

 

Last spring was different. I think part of it certainly stemmed from the suddenness of my mother’s death. I think part, too, from the bizarreness of the circumstances, both leading up to her dying and of the broader virus lockdown, both of which consumed a great deal of my psychological bandwidth, both of which contributed to a feeling of distance and isolation. And then there were the living who would complicate the event going forward no matter what I did.

 

But honestly, I don’t think it was any of that. I think a lot more of it came down to expectations. With my father, there was never an expectation from him or from anyone else that I would help. He made it clear throughout his life that I was not the son he wanted. He said as much to me directly. So perhaps there was a modicum of redemption when he called me in the end, not any of the three other steps/siblings, not his sister. Maybe because that was an admission of me being somehow worthwhile. In doing so, he gave me the power to deny him, although I chose not to. I suspect he knew I wouldn’t and relied on it. I had stepped up before where others hadn’t. Or maybe I was just the last, best choice he had.

 

With my mother, there was always a sense of obligation, from her and from others in my family. An obligation I no longer felt, nor felt the need to live up to. And yet, when the moment came, she chose to inform none of us. Like a feral cat, she slunk away privately to die. That level of rejection is pretty difficult to comprehend or accept.

 

But that lack of acceptance, that having to remind myself she was dead, was not out of a particular sense of sadness or grieving. It came with a certain measure of freedom and relief. It wasn’t that I could never speak with her again, it was that I didn’t have to. I no longer had to dutifully send cards and gifts, or make phone calls and get admonished or rebuked for caring or for trying to do what was right, in spite of the consequences, in spite of what it cost me. That I wouldn’t ever receive her calls again after her choices had caused her life to slip sideways, when she expected me to bail her out. In the end those choices killed her, or at least significantly contributed to her death.

 

It took those months to realize that I could finally set her burden down. And a burden it had become.

 

With my mother, like my father, there were really no larger, unanswered questions. Both my parents made their positions clear over the fullness of time, through words and deeds. As had I. Theirs had not changed, nor had mine. With both of them, long before their deaths came, I had already begun to disengage, if only for my own psychological stability. In a way I hadn’t had to with more favored friends and family even when I knew their deaths were imminent.

 

And yet, I did the same for my mother as I had done for my father and my stepmother. I performed the final ritual of laying her remains to rest, if not for me for others who, while they couldn’t or didn’t want to directly be a part of it, I believe needed it on some level for their own acceptance and mental well-being. I wrote up what I’d done knowing the people I shared it with might want to feel included in some way, where I was more ambivalent.

 

So perhaps on some level, I felt that instinctive need to honor then hide away my dead. To scatter their ashes to wind and water, only I know exactly where. To safely entomb them behind walls of light so we all might finally get some rest in peace.

 

 

© 2021 Edward P. Morgan III

Thursday, March 19, 2020

2 O’clock News - Spring Equinox 2020


When I was growing up, friends and I occasionally played D&D in a sporadic free-fire zone. Not out of any sense of desire or excitement. Rather because that’s where our best, most imaginative DM happened to live.

My friend lived in public housing. I’m sure a few of you are now nodding your heads as if that explains everything and is all you needed to hear. This was in Cocoa, Florida, not Cabrini-Green outside Chicago. But that didn’t mean there weren’t issues most of the players in our gaming group had never dealt with before, or likely since.

First and foremost was the 2 o’clock news.

Being in high school, we tended to keep late hours. Many of us worked part-time in restaurants, so our weekend free-time rarely overlapped. When it did, we would sometimes game late on a Friday night. Often, we would game at my friend’s place because his was the most warm and inviting, and tolerant of our odd, extended hours.

His family’s unit was on the end of the row which meant it faced two streets, with a common green space behind it between their row of apartments and the next row over. All the streets in this section of the neighborhood were named with either a number or a letter, which even then struck me as either unimaginative or contemptuous. When I’d first met my friend, he’d lived in a slightly larger unit in a slightly better section where the street was named after a flower. His family had been forced to move when his sister had moved out. The family was apprehensive about the new area as it had a worse reputation than where they had been. To my middle-class ears, that trepidation spoke volumes.

Still, theirs was a place I could drop by unannounced at midnight, as long as I followed two simple rules. First, rap softly on the back door to see if my friend or his brother was still up. Second, step back and to the right, into the light his mother’s bedroom window looked out onto and wait until I saw the curtain move. That meant she’d identified who I was. I’d been told in no uncertain terms there was a loaded .45 on the other side of that curtain so not to mess around. His mother had a well-earned reputation in the neighborhood that meant she could guarantee that no one would mess with the random white boys who darkened her door at all hours. Her precautions stemmed from how she’d earned that reputation. But that’s a story I may have already told.

One particular Friday night, the stars had aligned. All of our merry band of adventurers had piled into my friend’s tiny living room. It was just large enough for a couch and a coffee table with a couple chairs dragged in from the kitchen. Most of us were content to sit on the floor. Behind the couch was a head-height window that looked out onto the street facing the front door.

This Friday night was unusual. For whatever reason, we’d gotten started early, something like seven or eight o’clock. Which meant my high school girlfriend was with us. She had just recently joined our group and was only an intermittent attendee. While the rest of us had been hanging out here for years, public housing was a completely new experience for her.

Once we started playing, our exact location didn’t matter. It wasn’t quite the large dining room table most of us had started around but we held our character sheets in our laps or rested them on notebooks. We rolled dice on the coffee table or the floor. Little did some of us know that this was good practice for when we moved into college dorms a year later. By those standards, this location was palatial.

I don’t remember the adventure we were on, or even who was running it. I’m pretty sure it wasn’t me. All I remember is that we’d all gotten into character and were enjoying each other’s company. We knew we didn’t have much time as my girlfriend had to be home by midnight. Our surroundings faded pretty quickly as the fantasy world sprang up in our minds.

Sometime around 11:30, in the middle of what we knew was likely our last encounter of the evening, we heard first one sharp bang outside followed by a couple more. Pop. Pop-pop.

I was sitting on one end of the couch, another friend on the other, my girlfriend between us. Without even looking up from our character sheets, both he and I slid to the floor to get our heads below window level like synchronized swimmers diving underwater. Nothing new, nothing that needed comment. Almost no one else reacted except for a quick instinctive glance to check that we all had cinder block between us and the street. We knew the routine.

My girlfriend didn’t. She immediately turned and popped her face into the window, peering in the darkness outside intently, scanning the street for what had just happened.

“Were those gunshots?” she asked.

My friend at the other end of the couch and I again reacted simultaneously. We turned in tandem and each grabbed a different shoulder, physically hauling her below the window.

“Yes, those were gunshots,” we confirmed in stereo. That it wasn’t really a good time for prairie-dogging went unsaid.

The friend whose living room we were in casually added, “I guess the two o’clock news started early.”

The rest of us just nodded sagely and turned back to our characters. We knew we’d just been granted a little bonus time. Then we noticed that my girlfriend’s face had gone somewhat ashen.

“Uh,” she said uncertainly, beginning to pack up her character sheet and dice, “I think I’d better go.”

We all just smiled and shook our heads, not realizing that she hadn’t been through this drill before. Like walking into Mordor: one doesn’t simply wander outside in the middle of the 2 o’clock news.

Like many people, we all worked the kind of jobs that got paid on Fridays. As did the people in my friend’s neighborhood, many from regular, low-wage jobs, some from public assistance. Like any working-class neighborhood entering a weekend, that meant people had a little jingle in their pocket to unwind from the stresses of the week with a little alcohol or other mind-altering vice of their choice.

But unlike our middle-class neighborhoods where most people preferred to get their party on behind closed doors, this neighborhood was more social. People liked to hang out on stoops and in driveways, catching up on the week’s events. Picture a southern version of Irish Boston, or Italian New York, or any other somewhat closed community of your choice.

And like people everywhere, once tongues were well lubricated, people began to gossip. As their filters wore off and their self-censoring inhibitions disappeared, rumor and inuendo began to fly. Like the worst kind of high school whispers behind the bleachers or in the bathrooms most of us are familiar with.

My friend said you could learn everything you needed to know about what had gone on in the neighborhood during the week just by listening on any given Friday. Who was into what, who was fighting with who, who had cheated which deal, whose kids had broken into what car, who had good drugs or bad, who had a new job, who was back on public aid, who was in or out of jail, and who was sleeping with who. Kind of like a PSA meets CNN Headline without any of that pesky double source confirmation. Think Fox News.

Sometime after midnight, the long knives came out from old grudges or new grievances that had been stropped to razor sharp. Inevitably, tempers flared when someone crossed a line until someone else decided it was time to issue a few retaliatory warning shots, which often brought the street party to an end. Often, but not always. That crescendo usually came around 2 a.m. just when the juiciest bits of gossip were being served.

The 2 o’clock news.

“You’re stuck here for the duration,” I informed my girlfriend. “We may as well keep playing. It could be a while before things clear up outside.”

“What do you mean?” she replied with a mixture of suspicion and incredulity. “Won’t someone just call the cops?”

We all looked at each other uncertainly. How to explain that we weren’t in Kansas anymore. Or in her parents’ Indiana where they literally shot prairie dogs from the front porch for entertainment.

My friend stepped in to salvage us. Someone may or may not call the cops. Likely not for a variety of reasons if no one had gotten hit. Even if someone called, CPD wouldn’t arrive for at least half an hour, after they rounded up a couple two-man cruisers from more important duties. They didn’t waste much patrol time in his neighborhood. If they didn’t just do a drive-by, they would likely hassle everyone indiscriminately. No one would talk to them, at least that night. If they did, it might end up as a community bulletin next week. But in general, very few people trusted CPD, who at the time had a well-earned reputation for being racist, indifferent and heavy-handed. Kind of a rock and a hard place situation.

Once my girlfriend figured out that we weren’t trying to scam her into breaking curfew, she settled down. We convinced her to call her parents and tell them she’d be an hour late. That we were in the middle of something. Generally, our parents only wanted to know where we were, when we’d be back and that we were safe. In our minds, she was definitely that. As long as she waited for the street to clear. Which it would in about an hour, one way or another.

When it did, we would all escort her to her car, and convoy her out of the neighborhood if she wanted. Hell, I could drive her father’s truck and have someone ferry me back. That was extreme. In an hour people would have calmed down and gone to bed. The excitement was over. Again, this was Cocoa not South Central. We were just waiting for the all clear, which was a little more art than science.

She eventually called her parents and we kept playing. But by then, the game spell had been broken. When we disbanded for the night, we admonished her not to tell her parents exactly what had happened fearing she wouldn’t be allowed into my friend’s home again in daylight or in darkness. She didn’t listen, with predictable results.

But that’s not the point of this story.

At a party a couple months ago, a friend and I got talking about gun control.

When I told this friend that I had been in neighborhoods where guns were necessary to protect yourself because you couldn’t rely on the police, his immediate answer was, “Sure, but don’t export it.”

I found that statement troubling but didn’t pursue it. It was a holiday party after all.

But that answer niggled at me. The longer I thought about it, the more I found it to be the worst kind of pearl-clutching privilege (and in general I despise that word). To me, it implied that we just need to keep that over there, wherever there is. Those poor neighborhoods. Not in my suburbia. Or god forbid my exurbia.

Ok, that’s probably more than a bit unfair.

This was not what you would call a safe neighborhood. My friend didn’t. It was a poor neighborhood. It grew out of a legally mandated, segregated neighborhood. This was a neighborhood where the annual MLK parade drew angry KKK protestors on the way in and the way out. A neighborhood where many of its students were bussed to distant elementary and middle schools but couldn’t get proper funding or maintenance for their own schools within walking distance. A neighborhood where the cops were more likely to hassle you for the state of your car as you drove to work than to protect and serve. A neighborhood where if you called said cops, they might or might not show up in a timely manner for what most neighborhoods would consider pretty serious crimes. Or if they did alone, on a very bad day, they might find themselves trussed up in a closet by a local drug dealer who would then issue very serious threats against whoever called. A neighborhood where you could be working your second job restocking a walk-in freezer in a convenience store and emerge to find your cashier freaking out because she couldn’t remember how to open the register while someone was screaming at her and pointing a gun at her face.

Do I want to export all that to my neighborhood or any other?

Obviously not. In fact, I don’t want it to exist at all. But I know it did and still does. And likely will in places for the foreseeable future.

It’s not about exporting it, it’s about correcting it, one piece at a time as we are able. But as we do so, those of us inclined to do so, we need to remember there are unique circumstances which we may not share, understand, or really be able to relate to. And yet they are real and must be taken into account.

It only took our circle of friends a couple years to become inured to the situation. The 2 o’clock news had become normal to us, not even particularly threatening. Just something that made you slide to the floor without comment and keep going with whatever you were doing. But we were young and we were tourists, only visiting on evenings and weekends. We may have internalized it but we didn’t live it, not 24-7-365.

So, what do you do with that?

Here’s the thing. I witnessed my friend’s family struggle. I caught all the veiled prejudice and not so silent judgement directed their way growing up, some unenlightened, some very purposeful, all of it unrelenting. I also heard the tales of the levels of bureaucracy they were up against on any given day. That’s not an excuse. It’s a reality. One that you and yours have hopefully never seen.

What we call Welfare isn’t a monolithic, overarching program. There are dozens of federal, state, and local agencies, each with their own bureaucracy and regulations. To give you an idea, there was federal housing administered by a local authority (not free, supplemented down to your income level), programs for winter heat (but not summer AC), various nutrition programs (including SNAP, WIC, free and reduced lunches), pre-k and kindergarten programs, public assistance (what we call Welfare with various limits and restrictions), mandated busing (for his neighborhood, not mine) plus all manner of other social services (some of which you do not want to run afoul of if they show up at your door).

Those are just the ones I can think of off the top of my head. Each program was intended to address a specific problem. But no one had an advocate to ensure they were being treated fairly, or even received any benefit they might qualify for. Everything was DIY and OJT. Most of it is Byzantine by design to discourage people from accessing the aid they need.

I’ve just barely scratched the layers of intertwined complexity. There is no way to fix it all at once, not by passing a single piece of legislation or addressing a single aspect of the problem. We’ve been trying for fifty years with only moderate success. In the context of gun control, there is no one-size-fits-all answer for my friend’s mother that would have made her safe.

Did owning the gun make my friend’s mother safer? You can bet your life it did. When that curtain moved at midnight, I knew she was dead serious because of the stories she or her sons had shared with me. She and her family had been threatened by some very sketchy people in her life. People she rightfully feared, with no one to protect her. But I also knew I was safer in her house than I sometimes was at home.

In short, my friend’s situation was bigger than the 2 o’clock news. Addressing that alone works at the symptoms, not the underlying condition.

So, as we try to untangle this situation, and many other hot-button issues in this country, we need to be mindful that our solutions do not to make the problem worse for people just trying to get by. Because some of them are unlikely mentors. Like my friend’s mother and brother have been for me. Without a doubt, I would not be the same person without them.

And that, my friends, concludes this very middle class, suburban, equinox edition of your 2 o’clock news. I am Noddfa Imaginings, and you have found sanctuary.


© 2020 Edward P. Morgan III

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Big Data - Budgets



My financial education began one afternoon when I was maybe twelve. My parents had divorced two years before. That event alone had shaken my view of our family’s position on the economic ladder. At school the year after, I paid reduced prices for lunch based on economic need. I remember the long looks and negative commentary from certain teachers in my elementary school. We qualified for free lunches but my mother refused to enroll us. She believed that we wouldn’t value something unless we paid at least something for it. I think part of her decision was pride.

Even that change didn’t sink in right away. My sister and I were kids. By the time we were both in middle school, my mother was working. We thought were back where we started. We weren’t. A teacher’s salary doesn’t replace an engineer’s even supplemented by child support.

That day, my sister was asking my mother to buy her something she wanted, clothes as I remember. She was a couple of years older than me, at an age when many girls begin to focus on their appearance and their peers. My mother told her we couldn’t afford whatever it was she wanted. My sister would just have to save her allowance until she could afford it. My sister didn’t believe her and said so.

My mother then did something unusual. Instead of getting angry or just telling my sister that’s the way it was, she sat us both down and laid out the household budget. She walked us through her take-home pay. She added in the child support from my father. She subtracted off the mortgage, the car payment, the utilities, groceries, gas, school lunches, our allowances and showed us what was left for all the other expenses of the month, like clothing. As I remember, it wasn’t a lot of money, and somewhere near the price of the item my sister wanted. I’m not sure my sister believed the math, but I did.

It is a lesson I have not forgotten. To this day I keep a budget, using only slightly more modern technology than my mother’s father. He kept an accounting notebook in his desk, recording each piece of information in neat, orderly columns. I use an antique spreadsheet program. Where he updated his budget every week, I update mine once a year.

At its very simplest, a budget is third grade math, addition and subtraction. You add all your income and subtract all your bills and payments. If your income is greater than your expenses, you have savings. If your expenses are greater, you’re living on borrowed time. It’s that simple.

It’s so simple, in fact, that most people never bother to write one out at all. Many people will tell you they know how much money they have to spend in any given month. A few can balance the numbers in their head. More just glance at their checkbook register, sometimes remembering what bills are due within the next week. And an amazing number of people never bother to even balance that register against their monthly statements. The majority get by with that ad hoc strategy all their lives, at least until a financial crisis hits.

If it’s so simple, why bother with it at all? Economics 101: Knowledge is power, and power creates money. (It’s probably not economics; it’s more politics, psychology or military strategy, but you get my meaning).

If personal finances are an adventure, a budget is the map. At the center is a signpost reading “You are here.” In reality, it is more like a GPS. It not only tells you where you are, but where you’ve been. And if you’ve programmed in a destination, it can help you get there, though it won’t call out directions unless you ask.

You probably have a good idea how much extra money you have in a month. But do you know how that varies month to month throughout the year? Does that depend on whatever crisis arises in any given month? Do you know how much you are spending on maintenance for your house in any given year? How much of a pinch rising gasoline prices put on you in 2007? Do you know whether that new calling plan is actually saving you money (yes, they still exist)? Does the cost of repairing your old car cover the loan payments for a new one or are you better off keeping the one you have? Does your Sunday paper pay for itself? Can you tell whether your water-heater might have a problem? Your AC? Your toilet?

(And what about the airspeed of an unladen swallow? Wait, it can’t tell you that. Aaaah!)

I’ve used two types of budgets in my life, short-term and long-term.

When I say budget, I mean backward looking rather than forward looking. Where money went, not a Soviet 5-year plan of where I want or plan for it to go. So based in reality rather than informed speculation. I see that as a critical distinction. Many people get frustrated when their (often unrealistic) projections don’t match reality.

I started keeping a long-term budget when Karen and I were renting a house back before we were married. We entered the experience as an experiment to see whether we could or wanted to afford owning a home of our own. Instead of relying completely on the landlord to do all the repairs, we took on some of the minor ones ourselves, did a little DIY like painting with their permission and noted the big things that went wrong.

This first long-term budget was a way to see if we really had enough money to afford the added expense a house brings, not just a mortgage payment but all the maintenance and upkeep that goes with it.

We found we did and bought a house after 18 months of renting that one. The house we’re still in now.

When I first started, I updated my budget at the end of every month. Over time as I grew more comfortable with where we were, I deferred updates to every quarter. Almost thirty years later, I only enter numbers into our budget spreadsheet at the end of the year. By now, I know our bills like a well-worn book. If one comes up looking odd, I pull up our spreadsheet and browse the historical data to see if something truly is amiss.

A long-term budget is what people think of as the classic budget, a month over month record of household expenditures. Mine is a grid. The left-hand column contains the following categories (with subcategories in parentheses, each on their own line):


Electric (kW-hours)
Phone
Water (gallons)
Trash
Cable (internet)
Groceries (coupons)
Credit Card
Gas
Insurance (auto/registration, dental, eyes, medical)
Property Taxes/Insurance
House Maintenance (AC, appliances, cars, exterior, interior, lawn service, pest control)
Pets (food, vet)
Charity
-----------
Total Expenses


Across the top of the budget are the months of the year (Jan, Feb, Mar, etc.). I just fill in the appropriate box for each month. In our spreadsheet most categories automatically add their subcategories into a total (House Maintenance, Gas) so I don’t have to. All the categories are added into the Total Expenses for each month.

In those first budgets the line for Property Taxes/Insurance was Mortgage or Rent (property tax and insurance was included in our mortgage payment). When we paid rent in apartments, things like trash and water were included but when we rented the house, those were ours to pay. At points, we’ve had other categories that no longer apply (Propane, Long Distance under Phone, Newspaper and TV). There are subcategories we could add now (Netflix and Amazon under Internet which used to be a subcategory under Cable).

Mostly, it comes down to what I think I might want to know going forward. As long as it covered all our basic expenditures, the only thing required is that the document fit my needs.

For us, House Maintenance (exterior) includes any gardening or landscaping (including Karen’s tools), structural repairs like a new roof, windows or doors, and outdoor painting. Interior includes things like wall paint, new furniture (even my throw pillows) and repairs or remodeling. Cars for us includes any repairs along with oil changes and other regular maintenance, basically anything that’s not gas. For Insurance (dental, eyes, medical), I’m not talking about the premiums that are automatically deducted from Karen’s paycheck, but our out-of-pocket co-pays and deductibles. If we paid premiums from her take-home, we would those to add that category. Insurance (cars) is our premiums as well as registrations and AAA.

A note on House Maintenance for those of you who don’t own a home. Most financial experts say to plan on annual house maintenance running roughly 1% of what you paid for the house. So that’s $1000 a year for each $100k of the purchase price. I’ve found that to be pretty accurate for us, though over time we have had to base it on the current worth of the house rather than what we paid. That only includes things that must be maintained or replaced, not upgrades, redecorating or remodeling. Of course, like the S&P returns I discussed in the first essay, these expenses don’t conveniently average out year over year. So as a rule of thumb, we try to keep an emergency fund on hand that covers at least the most expensive maintenance. For us, that is a new roof, followed by an AC.

From the beginning, we’ve used US Savings Bonds to cover this rather than keeping the money in a savings account for a couple reasons. First, there is less temptation to spend that money because it’s harder to get to. Second, those bonds earn more interest. We’ve used CDs in the past, but I don’t like the penalty for early withdrawal. Neither of those interest rates is anywhere near S&P returns, but again, both are guaranteed and not subject to the vagaries of the market. More on that in a future essay.

Some of you are probably asking yourselves, what do kilowatt-hours (kW-hours) of electricity and gallons of water have to do with our budget? Strictly speaking, nothing. But when I am reading numbers off of bills and typing them into a spreadsheet, one more really doesn’t take much longer.

These numbers allow me to compare things more easily from year to year. The cost of electricity goes up, but with kW-hours, I can tell if our consumption jumped in a given year. A big jump in summer might mean an AC problem. An average jump, slightly higher in winter, might point to an issue with the water heater. I can also tell how much of a difference setting the AC thermostat one degree higher or lower makes.

A jump in water consumption might mean a plumbing leak. When we were on a minute-based long-distance plan, I input minutes used so I could see if we were routinely over or under the allocation of our plan, and maybe change it to one that’s more cost effective. When we had a Sunday paper delivered, we could tell whether the grocery coupons inside paid for it and more. (Hint: they did for a very long time).

(Ah, maybe he’s not just number-crazy or anal-retentive. Ok, too early to judge).

As an aside, our power consumption (along with a nifty bar graph of our usage from the past year) and gallons of water consumed (with a less nifty column of numbers) are prominent on our electric and water bills respectively. Our grocery store prints our coupon savings right on the receipt (separate from sales and specials) which is convenient.

I have never had any entries in the budget for Income. That’s because in general, Karen and I have been salaried. If our take-home pay varied significantly month-to-month (if we worked hourly or freelance), I would input that as well. Currently I compare Total Expenses to Karen’s base take-home salary for the month.

Now, here’s the first trick I use with budgeting. Karen gets paid every two weeks. At different points in my engineering career, I was paid weekly, biweekly and monthly. Currently, we round our monthly income down to two paychecks. When I was paid weekly, I rounded it down to four. That leaves us two (biweekly) or four (weekly) extra paychecks a year as money we don’t see. What we don’t see we don’t miss.

And note that I said base take-home salary. That’s the second trick I use in budgeting. I never consider any overtime or bonuses. We have each occasionally gotten one or the other, but I never included either in my income calculations. Again, all that becomes bonus money. So if we didn’t receive a bonus one year, or our overtime got cut, we were never caught short. Believe it or not, I worked with a number of engineers who depended on 10 hours of overtime a week just to pay their mortgages. They ran into a real problem when the contract ran short of money and overtime got slashed.

By basing my calculations on our base take-home salary that is two to four paychecks short, I’ve created a 7.8% annual buffer for emergency funds, savings or just bonus money. Money I can put to better use.

If you remember from the first essay, 7.8% is pretty close to my 10% S&P marker. And essentially created out of thin air. Ok, it’s actually an illusion. But as I said in the first essay, part of our philosophy is that if you don’t see it, you won’t spend it which actually does free that money up. That psychology is important. You will see it becomes a theme.

As well, that 7.8% is the entry point of living below our means, which as I said, I see as the key to our financial independence. Yes, it’s an illusion. But as long as it’s an illusion we want to believe, we will. And that’s all magic is, wanting to believe.

Another aside on the way we organize income. This is more esthetic than functional. But it does have an impact on the way we see our money.

When Karen and I bought the house together, we weren’t married, so we treated the arrangement in the same way we had as roommates. We each had our own separate checking and savings accounts but for ease we opened a new checking and savings account for the house. We each placed a set amount per month into that joint account. We based that number on our record of expenses from renting the house before along with adding in our new expenses. We paid all our shared bills from that account. Basically, all the items I listed off in the budget above.

We each contributed half to household expenses, including building up a small reserve in our joint savings as an emergency fund. We did this with automatic transfers from our personal accounts where our individual paychecks got deposited so we didn’t have to think about it (again, if we don’t see it, or in this case have to think about it, we won’t spend it). Anything each of us had left over at the end of the month was ours to spend as we pleased.

When we got married, that changed. We shifted the arrangement so that all of both of our paychecks were deposited into the joint account and then created automatic transfers of an equal allowance to each of our separate accounts.

We did this because when we were living together, we saw it as a limited partnership. Without that marriage certificate, each of us was free to walk away at any time. Keeping separate books and paying our share out of separate accounts made sense to both of us. Any overtime or bonuses were ours to spend alone.

After we got married, we shifted our view to something more like a corporation. Everything from both divisions got pooled together for operating expenses, with each of us getting enough side cash to buy gifts, treats for ourselves or lunches out without having to consult the other or potentially disrupt the joint accounting. If we ended up with extra money in house savings over time, we jointly decided how it got spent.

There is a distinct psychology behind all this that I’ll get into a bit more in a future essay.

As I said, I tally our budget out once a year using an Excel spreadsheet that Karen and I designed (which started in Lotus 1-2-3. I told you it was an antique). Now there are numerous other programs, off-the-shelf or online, which do all that but at the time this was our best option. We already owned a license for Lotus from work Karen did. I could have just used pencil and paper with a calculator as long as I double-checked my math, the same as I do with our taxes.

It usually takes me 2-3 hours at the end of December to input the data for the year. I sit down with all the bills from the previous year, sorted into piles by company and category, then input the numbers. Anymore, Karen reads them off for me. For the few items which don’t have statements, I pull what we paid out of our checkbook register.

As a final aside in case you are wondering, a year’s worth of paper bills for us takes up a 9” x 12” x 2” tray plus a standard envelope for the grocery receipts. We keep the grocery envelope by the bill box and put in receipts as we get them. We used to have another for Home Depot receipts for the house, but now we just pull them off our credit card statements, along with highlighting a number of other categories.

Each year, I have to make sure the spreadsheet doesn’t double charge for line items we pay for with the joint credit card (like groceries and most maintenance). But in the end, the budget just an estimate, not a financial ledger. In general, better an overcharge than an undercharge.

Most financial experts recommend you keep a full set of bill receipts for at least a year. I keep filed bills for one full year (the year before current) and shred the prior year’s unless there is a dispute (which I hang onto for five or longer). House maintenance receipts for major work we keep forever (things like AC repair or carpet replacement where we want to know who did the work, when it was done and how much it cost). We also keep a book with notes by year on what was done, mostly to satisfy our curiosity when one or both of us can’t remember.

All that, along with our financial account statements, easily fits in a two-drawer file cabinet. I could likely cut it down to one if I had to. And yes, I still stick with paper copies everywhere I can. We don’t pay bill electronically, mostly from momentum. Though as a side benefit for us, it’s harder for an anonymous stranger to hack an air-gapped paper file cabinet.

But as I said, when I started this, I didn’t have a full year’s bills saved. I just input as many months as I had, at the time only one or two. I built it from there forward. I’ve found a year is the best baseline because some bills, like electric, vary significantly month to month, while others, like home or car insurance, only get paid once or twice a year. For us, the water bill only comes every other month. Trash only bills us every three. I’ve known several people who get caught short when they forget something like their car registration, insurance or property taxes are due in a given month.

When I’m done inputting numbers, I print out a one-sheet summary, compare it to the year before and file it with other summaries dating back almost thirty years. The summary contains all the categories I listed above, where I have the program average the expenses monthly. If I see something jump from year to year, Karen and I discuss it, first to try to see if we can understand why, then to see if it is something we can or need to change.

I compare that summary to our income in a few different ways as a redundancy check.

First, I look at our joint savings at the end of the year to see if it has grown or shrunk. In general, it stays stable or grows a little. Because it’s a closed system with no other eternal inputs other than her paycheck (and her intermittent flexible savings account payments plus any tax refund), that is a good, instantaneous health check.

Next, I compare the monthly average to what I know goes into our joint savings and checking each month (based on two biweekly paychecks). The budget averages should be equal or lower.

Finally, I work our W2s backwards, taking her gross salary, subtracting off Social Security, Medicare, taxes, retirement savings, and insurance premiums (but not her flexible savings account money since we get that back), and dividing what’s left by 12. That should be greater than or equal to the monthly average from the budget. Ideally, I should be able to divide that number by 13 (to account for the 7.8% buffer) and have it come up the same, greater than or equal to the monthly budget.

Fortunately, for us, comparing those numbers has never come up in the red. That would have meant we were either underwater, or, with the 7.8% buffer I talked about earlier, skating a very thin line. Neither would have been acceptable to me. Both would have required either cutting back expenses or expanding our income.

But there have been individual years we’ve had to dip into savings to keep on an even keel, whether from replacing a roof, an AC, a car, or upgrading the windows. Which is exactly why we keep an emergency reserve. The real trick is remembering after drawing it down to build it back up.

In general, we dip into joint savings four times a year, when we pay property taxes and homeowners insurance, fund our IRAs (more on that in a future essay), and at Christmas. This is where that 7.8% buffer comes in. But in the end, it all has to balance out with the numbers in the black.

With that long-term budget, I had a baseline for what we were spending to see where we could cut back if we needed to when we transitioned from two incomes to one. I used it again when Karen was under threat of being furloughed for 30 days a year without pay, which would have meant losing one full month of her salary. I’ve used to as a baseline to determine where we’ll be when Karen retires, and will use it again when she actually does. A lifelong exercise.

Now that I have a map telling me exactly where we are, I can use its newfound wealth of information to navigate the shoals and shorelines to get to where we want to be. In the next essay, the real adventure begins.


© 2019 Edward P. Morgan III