I was in my new coffee place early
yesterday morning; well not “early” early, but it was early for
me. I knew it was early because the music was completely different.
I can normally gauge how close to on
time I will be getting to work by the song that's playing when I pour
my coffee: Barenaked Ladies and I'm right in the groove, if they're
playing Miley Cyrus, I'm going to be late because I have to go home
and take a shower.
I go to this place because I got mad at
my old place.
I'd been going there for years. It was
my home away from home and, when I was unemployed, it became my
office.
It was just like every other
over-priced coffee boutique in terms of what it served, what made it
different, what made it a place I could easily spend hours was the
décor. It was an over-priced coffee boutique made to look like a
cabin in the north woods. It had honey-colored pine logs on the
walls and a stone fireplace. It reminded me of the place where I
spent a lot of summers when I was a kid.
It stayed that way for more than a
decade and, as time went by, became more and more lived in like the
slippers you don't want to throw away even after the only thing
holding them together is memory.
Sure, the leather chairs were ripped
and the soft pine tables had been personalized with the initials of
some bored teenager, but it was my place.
But the Corporate came for my slippers.
They made over my place and made it their place; some place I can't
ever go back to . They took my slippers and replaced them with new
hard-soled shoes that pinch.
I wanted to give them the benefit of
the doubt, but they pulled down my cabin in the woods coffee boutique
and replaced it with one that looked just like every other
over-priced coffee boutique.
Gone were the welcoming caramel tones
and the comforting quality of the fireplace. They were replaced with
drywall and wainscoting, creams, ebony and lots of neutrals. The
half-logs had provided a measure of sound-deadening that made the
place feel less like a cafe and more like a high-traffic family room.
The hard, smooth walls now make the place sound like a cafeteria
during lunchtime rush.
The other thing they did, in the
interest of progress, was to replace the espresso machines. After
many years of seeing them in other coffee places, my old place had
finally got two machines that had the integrated coffee grinder.
Previously, the person making my Americano would have to dispense
coffee from the reservoir in the grinder. This has a very particular
sound as the dispensing lever is drawn across the front of the
grinder three times. It has always sounded to me like the spring
that draws the lever back to the closed position was a little bit
rusty because, in addition to the hard plastic-on-plastic sound there
was a tiny squeaky noise in the background.
Once dispensed, the coffee is pressed
firmly into the bowl and then the bowl is latched to the front of the
espresso machine. And after the pressurized hot water is forced
through the coffee and my drink is made, they remove the bowl and
empty its contents into the trash by slamming the metal bowl against
a rod that crosses the hole in the counter over the trash can.
And it's always three times: three
times for dispensing coffee into the bowl and three times of striking
it against the rod to empty the contents.
There is nothing else that sounds like
that. If you spend time in places like this, it's familiar and even
reassuring. When it was still my place and they upgraded to the new
machines where everything from grinding to packing and unpacking the
the coffee took place inside the machine it was a little unsettling
and it took some time to get used to.
In the new place, they have gone back
to the old, noisier arrangement and, with nothing to absorb the
sounds of the clicking and the slamming, it was jarring and
unpleasant. Now the noises collided with the conversations and
bounced all over the store from hard surface to hard surface. They
put caffeine in aspirin to cure tough headaches, I don't put caffeine
in me to get one.
So, now I go to a new place where they
call you “Hun” and “Dear” and “Darlin'.” It's the kind
of place where the pastries don't so much have to be defrosted as
released from their individual plastic wrapping. It's the kind of
place where you can by gallon-sized drink containers and fill them
with the soft drink of your choice while you fill your car.
So, my new coffee place is a gas
station, okay?
My gas station is directly across the
street from another gas station and both have multiple coffee urns
serving a variety of blends. In fact, the other place is more
popular, which is how I chose this place. I figured I could get in
and get out quickly thereby increasing my chances of getting to work
on time.
So, yesterday I'm in there and instead
of hurry up, you'll be late for work music, they are playing “Dust
in the Wind” by Kansas.
This is not get-stoked-to-go-to-work
music, this is
why-bother-roll-over-and-pull-the-covers-over-your-head-because-nothing-matters
music. A strange choice for a Thursday morning. Mondays, you expect
that kind of thing, Wednesdays definitely, but Thursdays?
It seems like every day we are learning
about how memory is more plastic, more fluid than absolute. When
you're young, you think of memory in binary terms: you know
something or you don't, you had a specific experience, or you didn't.
As you get older, you recognize how little control you really have
over what you recall and what is lost. And, more importantly, how
what once was lost can be found again when and where you least expect
it.
When you're young, you hear the
character name “Running Board” and immediately “Go Go Gophers”
comes to mind. You know that and think you'll always know that.
It's a fact, an absolute. But then you find that time has other
plans for you and the day comes when you have to ask what “Go Go
Gophers” was and who the characters were.
Memory is less a muscle you flex than
something that gets triggered, like a porch light with a motion
sensor, or an allergic reaction.
Memory can be comforting, but it can
also be unsettling because you never know when, or where, it might go
off.
So, there I was in the convenience
store getting my coffee and worried about the questions I was going
to ask in an early morning phone interview when “Dust in the Wind”
comes on and stops me in my tracks. In an instant I am no longer
thinking about food insecurity, but about Nathalie Feldman and a
moment three minutes and twenty seconds long that happened thirty-six
years ago.
I didn't have a lot of friends in high
school and generally considered myself fortunate that anyone would
want to spend any time around me. I didn't have a girlfriend in high
school, but I did have crushes. Not the pervy raincoat kind of
crushes, but the if-there-is-ever-anything-I
can-do-for-you-please-let-me-know kind. I was the kid who would
complain about his classmates being drunk on alcohol and hormones and
yet seek out opportunities to be around them. I wore the fact that I
would never get invited to the party as a badge of honor, but would
always volunteer to work it.
As I write this, I cannot remember
precisely how I met Tandy, or how we became friends, but I am certain
it will come to me. She was a popular girl in the class behind mine
and we spent time together to the point where I was her gay friend.
She would talk to me about boys she was dating and about movies and a
lot of other stuff I would listen and try to be helpful and sound
insightful on subjects that I couldn't possibly know anything about.
The more time I spent with her I think the less she saw me and the
more I became obsessed with her.
Her parents liked me which should have
told me more about where I stood than anything, but I was blissfully
oblivious.
Tandy had a Sweet Sixteen party. I was
invited and, like a glutton for punishment, I went. It was a
celebration for a friend and so I should be there, but at the same
time, I had a crush on her and she did not think of me that way and I
both did not know how to change that and was afraid to try for fear
of having it blow up in my face.
It was a formal affair, so I had to
dress up in my dad's ill-fitting tux making me look all the more like
a Maitre d'.
The party was at their house and they
had transformed their two-car garage into a dance club with mirror
ball and disco music. It was loud, it was close and it was totally
alien to me. It was also very clear to me that I had no business
being there, but I also couldn't leave. I was in one of those
slow-motion car accidents and could not look away, could not pull
out, could not protect myself.
The later it got, the more
uncomfortable I got. I wanted to be happy for my my friend I was
also heart-broken to watch her dance with her boyfriend knowing that
would never, and could never, be me.
I got to a place where I couldn't take
it any longer. I had to leave.
And then they changed the music.
I don't remember what was on before,
but suddenly they were playing “Dust in the Wind.”
I liked the song. With it's “all we
are is dust in the wind” fatalism, it spoke to my deep seventeen
year-old soul in the same way that teenagers think they understand
“Thunder Road” or “Hang On Sloopy.”
“All my dreams pass before my eyes
with curiosity....” It made perfect sense to me when I first heard
it and, in that moment, it seemed both a curious choice for a Sweet
Sixteen and the only choice for my personal soundtrack.
And then Nathalie asked me to dance.
What?
Who?
Me?
Dance?
I don't know why she asked me and I
don't know what made me say “Yes”.
I was hot, anxious and in no man's
land. An awkward, sweaty, dough-boy of an adolescent dancing with a
popular girl.
I say “dancing,” but it was more
that awkward box step shuffle that you see at weddings and high
school dances.
For the next three minutes and twenty
seconds everything was transformed, the song, the garage, the night
and even me. I say transformed, but it was something less than that.
My state did not permanently change, but, for a little bit, my
perspective did.
I saw things differently, I heard music
differently, I saw possibility. I was able to forget I was in a
garage. I was able to hear the song as hopeful, even optimistic. I
felt part of something.
And almost four decades later, I felt
all of that again standing between the Santa-shaped brownies and the
tree-shaped donuts.
It may have looked like every other
convenience store, but in that moment, it was a time machine, my time
machine bridging the gaps in both memory and geography.
I admit that it is frustrating and more
than a little disturbing to realize that you have misplaced a memory
like a set of car keys, but it is also kind of exciting to rediscover
it, to relive it. Memory is also a merry prankster seamlessly
combining what was with what you hoped could have been and what ,
according to other people, actually happened.
Memory is a subject that gains currency as we gain birthdays and it is perhaps because of its whack-a-mole property of popping up when and where you least expect it.
* * *
Earlier this fall, I spent a week with my mother and her husband as they took a lap around parts of Atlantic Canada and some places that were familiar from their shared roots there.
The trip had a bittersweet quality not just because it was the fall and the leaves were changing color, but because they were changing too. As they near the end of their eight decades on the planet, there was the tacit understanding that this was one of the last times, if not the last, that they could make such a trip.
For my step-father, who lives with dementia, it was not certain that he could be able to form lasting memories of these places, even as we visited them.
The changing colors of the leaves as they neared the end of their lives was beautiful and poignant and more than a little metaphorical. It was hard not to think about the forests of memories that we collect through our lives and what causes them to hang on and how they can so easily fall away even as they demand your attention.
At one point, my partner worked for the local chapter of the Alzheimer's Association and it was her job to educate the public and doctors about the disease. I remember her speaking in terms of the mind only being able to work with long-term memory and this is how we might understand why an Alzheimer's patient would speak only in the Pennsylvania Dutch she learned as an infant and be no longer able to speak the English she had been obliged to learn later in life. Like an onion, the outer, newer layers of memory are the most fragile and the first to leave.
Memory is subjective, it is fleeting and intoxicating and it is addictive. Memory is emotion and it is far more art than science. It is a powerful hallucinogen. It can both inform your experience of the present and rob you of it. It can be a sedative and a stimulant; a lens and a blindfold.
***
I take up my pen every year to write about Christmas because of memory and how I have been informed by it. I write because there is some unfinished business and because I cannot acknowledge that other business was finished long ago. I write because I, like that seventeen-year-old in that far-away garage, want more than is possible from the moment, because I want my version of the past and not somebody else's new and improved interpretation.
I write about Christmas because I am recognizing that, in the end, these memories are but leaves on a tree: growing, changing, briefly vibrant, drying out and dying. Memory dies and memory is triggered, or regenerated, reborn. Christmas, at least in spirit, dies and is regenerated every year.
So, we can imagine that Christmas is best understood as a memory, as having already happened and its meaning and value are to be re-discovered, re-membered. There is no right answer, there is only the individual, the personal answer to what any of it means.
For me, for many more years than was rational, the meaning of the season, like the meaning of that long-ago, clumsy dance, was in possibility and potential, of a future that would never be, but that was liberating to imagine, if only for a moment.
So, as we pretend to wrap ourselves in hearth and home this month and try to remember what it is like, , let us try, if only for a moment, to remember what could be, before the music stops.