Watchmen

“Who’s watching the Watchmen?” Dan and I are… finally… that’s who. What’s odd about this is that Dan is watching. Avidly.

Dan is not a fan of speculative fiction. He’s never picked up anything that might be called a “graphic novel”. He has little tolerance for the fantastical. Science fiction leaves him cold.

But he likes good design and he likes action. And Watchmen has these in abundance. Despite its bleak mood and noir atmosphere, it is an “up” movie. It’s hard to know, sometimes, whether we are watching the plot, the effects, or the sheer beauty of the film.

Dan won’t say he likes this movie. In fact, he doesn’t have much to say about it at all. But he was on the edge of his seat. I was the one watching the watching man. He was glued to the screen for two and three quarters hours, about as long as I have ever seen him sit still.

That movie was good!

Time to move on

Dan and I are driving to Montreal, where I will be going to Worldcon 67 (Anticipation 2009), and Dan will be hanging out partly working and partly on vacation. We cross the Merrimac River, and Dan says, “Did you know there used to be salmon on the Merrimac River?”

“Well, I’m not surprised,” I say. “The lobster in the ocean used to be so plentiful that they washed up onto the beaches. They fed lobster to the prisoners in the jails so frequently that the prisoners sent a petition to King George begging him to make them stop.”

“Let’s face it,” says Dan. “The planet isn’t what it used to be.”

No, it isn’t. “It’s going downhill fast,” I say, letting my pessimism get the better of me. “Time to move on. Time to get that colony ship ready to voyage out to the next planet.”

“I’ll be the first to volunteer,” says my science-fiction-averse husband.

Whoa.

Wasn’t there an article recently in The Boston Globe Magazine in which the author opines that “The baby boomers are the first generation that will… actually live too long. By refusing to expire after a reasonable number of years, the boomers are threatening the social order”? In arguing that the average lifespan of generations ago was in the forties meant that people in their forties were old, the author has succumbed to a common misunderstanding. She has overlooked the fact that over a third of the population died in infancy, in childhood, and in childbirth. And in war. It was not unusual for those that survived these catastrophes to live into their seventies or eighties or longer. But the author puts forth an argument that may be only too popular among the younger generations: The old folks have been around too long. Time to find a graceful, civilized way to get rid of them.

Well, young lady, this is your chance. We can solve the problem of the Earth on her last gasp and the overpopulation of healthy boomers growing older in one single, visionary stroke: Just pack us up in a space ship and send us off.

Hey, maybe a lot of us will go.

We baby boomers get a virgin planet where lobsters wash up on the beaches, and you get to deal with this dying Earth. Do you think you might actually do something about it before the human cancer kills the whole planet? Somehow, I don’t think so. Maybe it’s already too late.

And worse: Wouldn’t it be just like us to ruin the next planet, too?

Mom’s 90th birthday

This month was my mom’s birthday–her 90th. We had a memorable party attended by all her relatives and several friends that live nearby. Dan and I were the hosts, but Mom worked hard herself to prepare several of the items on the menu, and she came over early to help set up. Before all the guests arrived, Dan and I presented her with a gift in honor of this special birthday–a trip she’s always been hoping to take. Her response was pure delight:

“That’s what I like about life: wonderful things are always happening!”

That’s what I like about you too, Mom. You are a “wonderful thing” in my life!

Thunder

A thunderstorm is passing overhead. A flash of lightning, mostly obscured by the trees is closely followed by a loud crack and a persistent roll of thunder. Amber, who the moment before had been sleeping by my side, is instantly alert. His head jerks up. His eyes are wide; his pupils, dark. His ears antenna in all directions. The sound passes. Amber rests his head on his paws again.

I suddenly understand that wherever we get this fear of lightning and thunder from, it’s very deep and very ancient.

Experiencing a place

Recently, I put up a Web site about Dan’s and my trip to Turkey and Greece (http://www.songless.com/greece/). That site contains a (large) number of photographs, perhaps 150 of them, distilled down from the 650 or so that we took on the trip. By “we” in the previous sentence, what I mean is almost entirely “I”.

“There aren’t any photographs of you,” noted my friend Karen.

I too noticed the lack of pictures of me when I was editing the pictures, and believe me, I went through all 650 of them. What there was, was a lot of pictures showing the back of Dan in the forward distance just as he was about to vanish around some corner. There were also a lot of pictures showing streets and places empty of people where Dan had vanished around that corner just a moment or two before.

I spent many a happy hour in Turkey and Greece trailing behind Dan. We like the same kind of places and enjoy exploring them together (well, almost together) for hours on end. I explore with camera in hand, stopping to see if there is a picture in this place and if so to frame it and take it. I view places in two dimensions delineated by a frame. I have to stop and look. I have to stop and digest what I’m seeing and compose the shot to capture the essence of the place. I have to stand still to experience a place.

And Dan has to come back and get me when he’s gotten too far ahead of me and I get lost and don’t know where he went. Because Dan doesn’t experience places the way I do. He experiences places in glorious three dimensions by moving through them. He is restless. He wants to explore everything, map in hand, never pausing. Because for him, that’s the essence of the experience.

And here I thought we had both gone on the same vacation.

Amber

Amber, in case anyone reading this doesn’t know, is a twenty-pound Maine coon cat who has been living with us since he was a six-ounce Maine coon kitten. Amber has fur the color of peaches and cream, and he loves to be brushed. In fact, next to eating, being brushed is Amber’s (distantly) second-most favorite activity.

Amber has worked hard to give the overall impression that he’s dumb. Really dumb. That he’d come off second best in an IQ test against a sack of his favorite cat kibble. And he’s generally pretty successful at this.

In fact, Amber’s overall success at appearing more stupid than any ambulatory organism could possibly be should have been my first clue. But I am only now beginning to suspect that he has my password memorized, and when I go off to sleep at night he sneaks into the kitchen, gets on the computer, and—he’s blogging!

Amber is actually famous on the Web for his advice on how to look your tiptop best. He doesn’t know much about fashion, but thousands of women all around the world follow his column for the latest word in skin- and hair-care products and techniques. They all think he’s a glamorous supermodel. They have no idea he’s a guy (well–of sorts), even less that he’s a cat.

He seems to be telling me now that if I don’t get off the computer and brush him, he’s going to change his will and cut me out of it. He’s going to leave his millions to… Gwenny. But I’m not worried. I know he has it all invested in cat-food futures.

Songs

I generally hate having a tune stuck in my head. There are some songs I can no longer even listen to because I know that if I listen to them, they will be stuck in my head for weeks afterwards, long after they turn from song to jingle to an advanced torture device best reserved for suspected terrorists.

But my mom has a different take on it. She has, it turns out, been humming the same song for at least the last quarter of a century. (The song, as it turns out, is “La Vie en Rose”.) “I love having this song in my head,” she told me. “This way, I never have to worry about what I’m going to hum.”

Hmmm. Oddly, I’ve never worried about that either. At least–not yet.

“So… what did you do today?”

For Dan more than for me, telephone conversations catching up with loved ones seem to revolve around the theme of activities. “So… what have you been doing today?” “How’s your day going?” “What have you been up to?”

I sometimes find this a bit disconcerting–partially because it means that when we’ve finished recounting the activities of the day (or whatever period since we last talked), the conversation is over. Hey! Wait a minute! I wanted to talk about a movie I just saw, or about string theory, or doppelgangers, or whether the world is really going downhill or is that just a perception that comes of getting older.

But primarily I find this disconcerting because when I am the one at the other end of this conversation, I can seldom adequately remember everything I did. Sometimes I feel so… dumb in these conversations. “What did you do today?” “Er… I don’t really know. I can’t remember…”

Apparently, my mother has this problem, too. She has noticed Dan’s tendency to ask about her day’s activities, and this time she came prepared. She made a list. Here it is:

Friday July 13
Made bed & breakfast
AM 10:30 – 11:30 exercise
lunch
12:30 Van to Natick Mall
walked end to end
Shopped Sears (& bought)
…Lord & Taylor
…Macy’s
Returned 4:30
1/2 hr nap
Some desk work
Dinner
Relaxed

So… My Mom’s been pretty busy. Now, how about YOU? What did YOU do today? Oh, and hey: Do you think there might be whole other universes curled up in infinitesmally small gaps inside of this one?

Outspoken Old Women

After a late lunch at The Crab House in Jupiter, my mother and I walked to the end of the pier to watch the Manatee Queen dock and unload her passengers. She had just returned from a two-hour cruise viewing the homes of the rich and famous on Jupiter Island.

Mom and I had thought about going on that cruise, but she had listened the previous night to a garbled recorded message that seemed to suggest that the price was $24, which she found a bit unbelievable. I called the next morning to check the price. “It’s $24 for adults,” the man at the other end of the phone told me, “and $15 for children.” “What about seniors?” I queried. He replied, “They can come too.”

Hmmm. A comedian we have here. “And at what price can they come?” I persisted. “Darling,” he told me, “it’s the same price as anyone else. Almost all my passengers are seniors.”

Mom quickly and decisively dropped any plans for the boat ride. However, I was curious how many passengers they had for the price. The answer was: The small and rather uncomfortable-looking pontoon boat was crowded to the gills. Forty-eight people disembarked, none of them children. So the two-hour trip grossed a bit over $1,150. Subtract a couple of hours worth of gas at, say, ten knots maximum, and you get, oh, call it a thousand dollars? Times two trips per day. Much of it in cash from people arriving at the last minute just before departure. No expenses on food or even pillows for the benches. It seemed to me that this was a very lucrative business.

“Excuse me!” shouted my mother over the boat owner’s loud music. When he noticed someone seemed to be trying to talk with him, he turned the music off. “Do you also own the restaurant?” “No,” he said, “I just rent the dock from them.” “Why is the tour so expensive?” my mother asked. “This isn’t much of a boat you have here. The benches don’t even have backs.” He didn’t deign to reply. “Didn’t there used to be a bigger, better boat that did the same tour?” “Yes,” he said, “but they couldn’t make a go of it. They kept running aground.” “How about if you gave a one-hour tour for half the price” persisted my mother. (“I don’t know this woman,” I muttered to no one in particular. “Just met her on the dock two minutes ago.”) “Lady,” said the boat owner, “you don’t like anything do you? First you criticize me [this was not fair], then my boat, and now my prices. I don’t have to talk to you.” He turned the music back up, loud.

At this point a good-sized yacht approached the dock. A well-tanned fortyish man was at the helm, and his barefoot, blonde wife (probably) prepared to fasten lines upon arrival. Two young girls and an older couple were also aboard. Unfortunately, the man came in at too head-first an angle and too fast. He couldn’t slow down enough, nor make his turn completely. The boat hit the dock hard bow-first and then drifted back away. On the second approach, the woman was able to leap off the boat and pull it to a stop, cleating it to the dock fore and aft.

Catching the man’s eye, my mother said, “You didn’t do a very good job of that, did you?”

No kidding, Mom.

And just in case anyone is wondering, I was the invisible one melted under the floorboards.