Saturday, September 15, 2007

Ecclesiastes 3


1 To everything there is a season,
      A time for every purpose under heaven: 
2 A time to be born,
      And a time to die; 
   A time to plant, 
      And a time to pluck what is planted; 
3 A time to kill,
      And a time to heal; 
   A time to break down,
      And a time to build up; 
4 A time to weep,
      And a time to laugh; 
   A time to mourn,
      And a time to dance; 
5 A time to cast away stones,
      And a time to gather stones; 
    A time to embrace,
      And a time to refrain from embracing;
6 A time to gain,
      And a time to lose; 
   A time to keep,
      And a time to throw away; 
7 A time to tear,
      And a time to sew; 
   A time to keep silence,
      And a time to speak; 
8 A time to love,
      And a time to hate; 
   A time of war,
      And a time of peace.

 

It’s been almost one year since Matt died in a helicopter crash in Nepal.  This time last year we were sending messages back and forth discussing if we would have time to meet in New York as I was heading back to France and he would be returning to DC.   He was sure that his jet lag would make it impossible, I was sure that I could cajole just a few hours in transit to greet each other.  To hold his ear, to slap his shoulder, to smile at his thoughts.

But the last year has been good for me too.  I’ve reflected and expanded.  New city, new job, new friends, new home.  And old friends, rediscovering things from old homes, times I’ve felt old.

One new friend told me that there is a twitch in my smile that makes him think I know something.  Another told me my eyes have sorrow.  I think we see what we want to see.  Or what we need to see.  Or what we expect to see. 

This year has been my time to weep and laugh.  To reap and then sow.  I’ve danced and celebrated, and thrown away.  As any year.  Like every year.

And I miss him.  Today, and every day.  Like any day.

Posted by Tyrus at 06:34:44 | Permalink | Comments (5)

Sunday, January 21, 2007

My Uncle

Before moving to
France, my mom and her sister drove out to Boston and helped Douglas and I move furniture back to the island.  The four of us rode in my aunt and uncle’s truck across the Eastern Time Zone, taking turns behind the wheel.  My aunt cleverly made an X out of the white sticker strips from a book of stamps and stuck it on the inside of the tailgate.  This X was visible in the side view mirror and told us, at a quick glance, if the tailgate was still up or if it had burst open and all of my possessions flung across the highway.


Long road trips are a great way to know your fellow passengers better, build friendships, test boundaries.  In the week that Mom and her sister spent in Boston prior to our leaving and the two days on the road I never grew sick of their company.  The time was spent learning about each other.  We ate together, joked over shared characteristics, and explored different perspectives on common memories.  The departure is high among my favorite memories of living in Boston.

At one point on the trip, with Douglas and Mom in the back seat navigating, me driving, and my aunt riding shotgun, she told me a story about her early married years.  She and her husband were working around the clock.  He was employed full time as a ferry captain and she was busy creating Island Bike Rental.  In addition they raised three kids.  They saw little of each other during the day and “only had time to argue at night, and by then the boats weren’t running so I couldn’t leave him.”  She laughed as she said this, so I took it that she didn’t mean it. 

But I did appreciate learning that they argued so early in their marriage.  Being the youngest of three in my household growing up, I mostly saw my parent’s marriage unraveling.  The tender moments were few and my aunt and uncle in the little yellow house were my young example of how happy life with someone can be.  Her joking disclosure that even they had stressful moments was cheering.

Her husband was born on the island.  His grandfather was a lighthouse keeper and in his career tended the Fresnel lenses on a few of the lake’s islands.  His father had white hair in his youth and was called Cotton.  By the time I knew him he’d lost the hair, but kept the nickname.  Skip’s mother wore horn rimmed glasses and a Mamie Eisenhower dress in my parent’s wedding pictures.  They were of the island and uniquely typical of the characters who inhabit it.  In this vein was my uncle.

The holiday season on the island is a marathon of parties, open houses, potlucks, and other reasons to be merry.   Every Christmas Eve at St. Paul’s church starts at 10:30 and stretches until midnight.  After the bells have rung and the anthem sung and the choir has marched up to the altar the late comers would sneak into a pew.  One teenaged year, my uncle was among the sneakers.  He and a friend ended up seated directly in front of me and my sisters.   They swayed when we stood to sing.  But not in rhythm with “Joy to the World”.  Their tipsy swaying brought an eye roll and giggle from my aunt’s face. 

Another Christmas, I came home with a boyfriend who was also an island boy, but of a different type.  My uncle lent us his snowmobile and we spent the night in borrowed winter gear and my mom’s 1970s electric blue disco motorcycle helmet racing through the snow covered field of wild flowers near the cemetery.   Twenty years earlier, in that same field, I was riding with my uncle on his snowmobile.  My sister and a cousin were in a dog sled behind us.  He let me steer, I pulled too hard to the left, and everyone tumbled.  I pulled my helmet off to hear him laughing the loudest.

Last month my uncle passed away after a long fight with cancer.  And it was a long fight.  When I made the road trip with my aunt and mother and Douglas, we knew he was fighting.  My aunt wore a necklace with two figures embraced in a dance.  It was a gift from him to remind her that he always wanted to be with her sharing a dance. 

In August my cousin told me that she was introduced to coffee drinking by her dad.  He would bring a cup to her in the morning as a way to encourage her to get out of bed.  When she became a property owner he would visit on winter mornings and they’d share a pot of coffee.  And talk.  He was a good talker. 

But now, another member of the old guard has moved on.  Symbolically, my uncle’s death is significant to the island.   Prohibition, the Depression, the War, and the automobile took their toll on the island’s thriving turn of the century economy.  He was of the post-war generation that was raised there and built their livelihoods and prospered there. 

Tangibly, my uncle’s life was more significant to the island.  In the 40 years since their businesses were created and expanded, he and my aunt have employed thousands and generated millions in revenue.  The impact is hard to measure.  Ferries from both of the boat lines cruised alongside each other as his casket was carried home for his funeral, which filled both island churches. 

Each year that I spent away from home it was on my mind that I was missing another Christmas Eve of witnessing him sneak into church and laughing the loudest.  And I kept thinking back to a blessing from the French Protestant minister Henri Amiel:

Life is short;
And we do not have too much time
To gladden the hearts of those
Who travel the way with us.
So be swift to love
And make haste to be kind.

Because it sums up my uncle so well.  In addition to all the hard work, he loved so easily. 

Katherine’s Memories

Crosser Funeral Home obituary

Fremont News Messenger article

Posted by Tyrus at 03:16:46 | Permalink | Comments (6)

Sunday, December 3, 2006

Sixteen Percent

“Candy in the morning?”  It was the first thing Luswin said to me today.  Shortly after 6am, I was woken by the coffee grinder instead of my jetlag for the first time since arriving home last week.  I climbed out of bed and had my hand in a bowl of Hershey’s Kisses on the dining room table.  Already the night before I had to hide a bowl of red and green M&Ms to stop myself.

Being back has been a junk food tour de force.  I arrived in Washington on Tuesday night and gorged on pecan pie, mini-brownies and some raspberry pastries in George’s kitchen.   And again Wednesday morning.  Then an egg and bacon (hmmm, bacon!) croissant at a buffet downtown DC.  Dinner that night was a taco salad with college friends Rachel and Bryce.  Craig joined us too. 

Thursday morning was round three with the mini-brownies.  Some secret ingredient was keeping them fresh.  I flew to the dedication of the Asia Trail in the National Zoo and afterwards grabbed a Blimpie sandwich.  After the memorial service at the National Cathedral I continued my diet regimen with rocky road fudge, assorted cheeses, and tarts.  And an herbal tea.  That night at the second reception I nibbled on beef satay and a carrot stick.

Back in George’s kitchen I had another mini-brownie.  They’re so small, you know?  Friday morning I made waffles, and managed to eat three throughout the day.  George wisely stuck with one before heading to work.

The real fun began Friday night when I relocated to Karen’s home in Alexandria.  The piece de resistance was a bag of Cheetos.  It called to me from on top of the refrigerator (sorry Rachel, they weren’t the baked kind).  And then some potato chips and French onion dip.  Karen and I went to a bar on Capitol Hill where we found Tommy Yost.  He’s in the process of moving to DC and she let me know that he isn’t in the habit of eating everything in sight when he stays with her. 

We lamented the fact that Kristin couldn’t join us, but deduced that having just the three of us in the same room was the equivalent of 16% of the PIBHS 1989-1990.  Math is hard and took a little bit to figure it out.  The biggest laugh came after we counted everyone in HS that year using only fingers and toes. 

In the morning the eating continued when I discovered a secret stash of rice krispy treats in the laundry room and Karen made a bowl of popcorn.  I put my foot down at lunch time and had a salad.  Which I then smothered in creamy Italian dressing.  Tangy!

Dinner was at Alper and Jeremy’s house where they were having a holiday party.  The first thing on my plate was a chocolate chip cookie made by Gerry Altoff.  (He wasn’t there but Kristin and Cyndee were.) 

For breakfast on Sunday I discovered a packet of apple and brown sugar oatmeal next to the bag of cheetos (which I finished).  Karen’s roommate Leeana made me two sausage links too, even though I only asked for one.   But I ate both. 

On the drive up to NJ with Nate and Naomi we stopped twice for gas and bathroom breaks.  Somehow I just wasn’t interested in the honey roasted peanuts Nate was pushing.  Not the trail mix Naomi offered either.

But there were the bowls of candy at Luswin and Fritz’s.  And the grilled steak and mashed potatoes.  And the cheese and crackers. 

It’s good to be home.  Even if I get tsk-tsked for my morning food habits.

 

Posted by Tyrus at 15:32:32 | Permalink | Comments (3)

Friday, December 1, 2006

Blessing

The Blessing from the World Wildlife Fund Memorial Service, held November 30 at the National Cathedral:

May God bless you with discomfort at easy answers, half truths, and superficial relationships, so that you may live deep within your heart.

May God bless you with anger at injustice, oppression and exploitation of people, so that you may work for justice, freedom and peace.

May God bless you with tears to shed for those who suffer from pain, rejection, starvation, and war, so that you may reach out your hand to comfort them and turn their pain to joy.

And may God bless you with enough foolishness to believe that you can make a difference in this world, so that you can do what others claim cannot be done.  Amen.

The entire program can be found here.

WWF update on the Eastern Himalayas team.

Posted by Tyrus at 17:38:52 | Permalink | No Comments »

Saturday, November 18, 2006

FYI - Update

I’ll be back in the US this month.  I’m flying into Washington on November 28.  I’ll be staying with my ex George and his partner Rudolph for a few days.  While in DC I will be attending the memorial service for my friend Matt and his colleagues from the WWF who perished in a helicopter crash in Nepal.

And then I’ll be heading up to New Jersey and staying with friends Luswin and Fritz while I get settled. 

Douglas has a job interview in Berlin at the end of November and is planning to head to New Jersey in the first week of December.

 

 

Posted by Tyrus at 20:24:45 | Permalink | Comments (2)

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

About Three Times

About three times today I made a mental note to email Matt about something that was happening.  And so, about three times today I had to slow my mental pace.  Three times today I remembered what it felt like to let the news of his death sink in.  Three times I felt isolated.  Three times I had to readjust. 

I didn’t realize until he was gone just how much I relied on Matt.  He’s definitely high on my list of people I talk about.  “You know such interesting people,” my mom told me once.  I sure do.  What’s the point in knowing boring people?  And Matt was interesting. 

If you want to know who impacts you, move away.  Move to a new city and meet new people.  And then listen to who you talk about to your new friends.  You might think your ex-boyfriend was important, but it could be the administrative assistant at your old job who you talk about the most.  Maybe you were in the same classes with a good friend all through grad school, but it could be the once a week coffee-break partner who’s advice you repeat.

Matt was like that for me.  He wasn’t a fully integrated part of my circle of friends in Boston - how could he be?  He spent half of each year living on a tropical beach counting turtle eggs or lecturing about blue footed boobies - but through long distance communication he became important.  His take on my life was virtually as an outsider.  Most of the people I whined about he’d only met once, if at all.  He was seemingly impartial, and it was easy to be honest with him about things that mattered.  And he became someone I repeated.

Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross’s research categorizes grief into 5 stages: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance.  The more recent work of John Bowlby puts grief into 4 categories: Shock and Numbness, Yearning and Searching, Disorganization and Despair, and Reorganization.  It sort of pisses me off that the Bowlby research doesn’t include a stronger spot for Anger.  It is the closest descriptor for what I feel.  Somedays I feel like I have moved on to Acceptance, but only in terms of accepting my anger.  I accepted that Matt is dead shortly after hearing the news.  But that’s when the anger intensified. 

It was pointed out to me that a gay man my age 20 years ago would have witnessed the death of nearly half  his friends.  I should be content that I’ve been spared that experience.  I suppose. 

I suppose that each time today I felt the urge to contact him I should count as a blessing that at one time it was a possibility. 

Tonight I’m wondering what Matt would think of the hard time I’m having with his death.  I’m wondering why I found him easy to confide in.  I’m wondering if at the time I even knew what a good friend he was.  I wonder if he realized how important he was.  I hope I returned the favor. 

 

Posted by Tyrus at 20:17:57 | Permalink | Comments (1) »

Friday, September 29, 2006

Anger

There are 5 stages of grief, but I’m quite content to hold onto Anger.  My friend Matt died last weekend.  I’m angry that the universe has revealed itself to be a non-democratic system of the living and the dead.  I’m angry that someone who was acting to make positive changes in the world, an entire team of people actually, is now dead.  Mostly though, I’m angry for purely selfish reasons.   I don’t want to live in a world where he doesn’t exist.  I know I have to do it, but I don’t have to be happy about it.  It’s like walking through life knowing that things are wrong.  The urge is to correct it, but frustrated by the impossibility of it. 

Sunday night I recieved a message from Craig, AKA “the Pilot”, that our mutual friend Matt was in a helicopter that disappeared in the Himalayas.  A search party from the government of Nepal was looking for the aircraft. Monday morning I read the news that the wreckage had been found, no survivors. 

Monday afternoon, I met Craig for the first time.  I’d heard stories of him for nearly 4 years, but for reasons of geography and skepticism, we hadn’t met. Craig was the closest thing to “the love of his life” for Matt. Their own relationship was complicated by the traveling that Matt did for his contract jobs in the Galapagos, Virgin Islands, India, etc.  But wherever Matt was, the Pilot made a trip to see him.  And whenever Matt was back in the States, he spent time at the Pilot’s home in Cincinnati.  

I’m in NYC before heading back to France in a few days and Craig moved to Long Island only two weeks ago.  I went down to Penn Station to meet Craig’s train.  I recognized him instantly from pictures Matt had shared, and from the pain in his face. We cried on 7th Avenue for a few minutes and then wandered aimlessly, awkwardly for a time.  Laughing, then crying, then laughing some more.  Eating, coffee, drinking.  We ended the day having dinner with my friends Luswin, Mark, and Michael.  Surreal zombies at the table.

Matt was a Mormon, and as such he rarely drank.  Which made our friendship convoluted.  I was dubbed his “drinking buddy”, ridiculous that I’d have a beer while he’d be sipping Sprite, we stuck with milkshakes.  But when he did have a drink, typically to be social or polite, he’d order an amaretto sour and hold onto it all night.  So, Monday night, we went into a bar and ordered a round of them.  I’d never had one before.  I’ll never have one again.  They’re horrible.  “Matt’s getting the last laugh,” Craig said. 

Matt was in Nepal for his job with the World Wildlife Fund.  Authority over a national park had been given to local organizations and he was returning from the exchange ceremony.   Six other WWF staff members were passengers on the helicopter, in addition to Nepali goverment ministers, foreign diplomats, members of the press, and the flight crew.  In total, 24 died.  He’d been in Nepal for 6 weeks, scheduled to return to the US today.

When I moved to my sister’s in Columbus for the summer Matt joked that we’d switched lives.  His job at WWF was only 3 months old, and it was the first time he had his own apartment.  His work experience up to then involved a few months on a beach in the Caribbean counting sea turtles, some time in the Galapagos Islands teaching school children, a 9 month internship with a conservation agency in India, not to mention his 2 year missionary stint in Chile.  His life had been divided between the guest room in his sister’s home in suburban Boston and intermittent assignments overseas. 

I spent the last month this summer in the US waiting for him to get back so we could talk and laugh about living with relatives.  I had stories to tell him about the surrogate friends I’d made in Columbus.  And now, I want to tell him about finally meeting the Pilot.  But those are phone calls and emails that won’t be made.  And I’m angry about that too.

 

Posted by Tyrus at 18:08:48 | Permalink | Comments (5)

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

My friend Matt,

my drinking buddy,
the sea turtle guy,

who I speak of maybe too much,
who lived in India, the Galapagos, Virgin Islands, Mexico, Ecuador,
who wore the “Jewcy” t-shirt,
who made me laugh and knew my frustrations,
who I was lucky to know,

died in a helicopter crash in Nepal on Saturday. 

 

World Wildlife Fund

India Chronicles

Albany Times Union

Deseret News

Channel 4 in Salt Lake

Matt
 

Posted by Tyrus at 06:30:41 | Permalink | No Comments »