Sunday, March 31, 2024

 Parental Artifact Number 25(a)—Naughty postcards.



In the boxes of postcards that we found in my parents’ closet, there were a fair number that modern sensitivities find problematic. They are fossils, imprints of attitudes that, like dinosaurs, once ruled the earth but are now (thankfully) endangered. They were sent by members of my dad’s lab, away at meetings or on vacation, to the drudges who were stuck behind their benches, mostly in the ‘70’s and early ‘80’s. From the messages, it seems like it was expected, close to an obligation, to send a racy card back to the group, whether from Tahiti or Belgium or Bangalore. 


In fifty years, a lot has changed in academia. I remember very few women in my dad’s group from that time—there was a lab assistant who was there for most of his research career, a professor who was associated with his group, a visiting postdoc and a handful of grad students. I don’t think my dad felt any need to fight against the mores of academia on their account at that time, he probably just took it for granted. Fifty years later, recent cohorts of grad students in the biological sciences have been majority female. Workplace standards of what is acceptable have changed. Complain about “woke” all you want, those changes are uncomplicatedly, unreservedly good. I look at these cards and what is written on them and I have to wonder what I would have felt, were I a 22 year old woman with a serious interest in insulin receptors, looking at those cards taped to the break room ‘fridge. 

I’m not going to condemn my dad as a sexist pig, nor am I going to excuse him as “a man of his time.” I think, if anything, I’ll chide him (or, rather, him as he was in the 1970’s) as perhaps not as thoughtful of the “other” as he could be—not actively bad, he was busy and just couldn’t be bothered to do the extra work to resist being bad or change habits or go against the flow. Honestly, I don’t need these postcards to remind me of several other instances of this lack of deeper thought from him, a laugh at the expense of someone not in the main stream. But these cards are useful to remind me that sometimes doing good—or even more trivially, failing to do bad—just takes a tiny modicum of thinking about others from their point of view, and really doesn’t cost me that much, so I should do it more often.

(There is one of these many cards I’ll single out, a slab of beefcake amidst the cheesecake—to the lab, from Sarah J., who wrote from Honolulu in 1983, “I was looking for a dirty card when THIS “Island Beauty” caught my eye!” I don’t remember Sarah, but I’d like to tell her I’m kind of sorry for my dad’s shortcomings, and I hope you stuck with it. Here’s to you, Sarah, and hopefully we can keep making progress.)

 Parental Artifact #25? A box of postcards (used); a box of postcards (blank); and a nice pen.



The internet is full of rabbit holes that one can fall down into and then emerge from hours later, blinking, mouth dry, wondering why it’s dark out. This box of used postcards that got stashed away in my parents’ closet is much the same thing. Bright pictures, short texts that come out of nowhere and are occasionally very revealing or enlightening, or just enough to keep you scrolling on—it’s all there.
There are postcards here over a hundred years old, postcards less than a decade old, postcards my parents sent and received, postcards to and from my grandparents, my great grandparents, work associates, distant family, people I know and people I have never heard of. They are all in a jumble, and making sense of things is a challenge. A card to somebody I’ve never heard of, from somebody else I’ve never heard of, about spring break in San Diego 75 years ago is next to a card my mom sent to my aunt from a vacation twenty years ago. My ability to parse this jumble, how much interest I have in a card, and how much it ads to a character in my memory, is a linear function of how closely related I am to the sender.
I can read little snippets of the relationship between my parents in the cards my dad sent to my mom when he was a young professor away at a conference and she was at home, pregnant with one of my brothers (“REMEMBER TO TAKE YOUR VITAMINS!”—what a biochemist thing to write!). My parents sent lots of postcards to their siblings and parents while they traveled, and often there was the annotation “please save this card,” so they were able to get the cards back as souvenirs. That’s always nice, because I can read my mom or dad’s account of things—even at a posh tourist lodge in Kenya, sweat and flies were annoying, and the kids were rambunctious to the point of concern (sorry, mom).
My grandparents, particularly on my mom’s side, were prodigious postcarders. After they retired, they traveled widely, favoring ocean travel. There were often daily updates, written after a ship-board dinner, as they worked their way up and down the coast of Mexico and beyond. Nothing especially deep—Grandpa was grouchy about a taxi driver, or the market was interesting. There are a couple of cards to and from a great-grandfather on my mom’s side—Christmas greetings, or the complicated business of arranging a meeting while overseas. There are also cards from uncles, aunts, great-uncles and great-aunts, and so on. I did not know them very well, but it is interesting to see what their cards suggest about relationship between them and my parents.
Outside the family, there are a lot of cards between my dad and his various professional associates. Science has long been an international effort so the correspondence was worldwide—former lab mates from Argentina to New Zealand, reprint requests from countries that no longer exist, and lots of cards from my dad and others, away at meetings in the US and abroad, back to their co-workers. And then there are lots of cards about which I have no idea. Maybe they were sent by friends of my grandparents? Still others, I do not recognize the name of either the sender or the recipient—how did these even end up in my parents’ closet? Aside from bits of gossip that are amusing on their own, these don’t really mean much to me.
(I will just note, as an aside, that these cards give lie to the idea that there was a golden age of cursive penmanship. The cards from 1910 are just as illegible as any I write, eccentric spelling is the rule over the entire collection, and micrographia, while great for sending as much information as possible, makes receiving that information difficult.)
There is a larger interest that these cards trigger, less about what was communicated than about how. As Marshall McLuhan noted, the medium is the message. A postcard is necessarily public, open for anyone to read (the Russian word for postcard is “Otkritka” or “open writing”). A postcard is also, despite the efforts of micrographic correspondents, terse. You are lucky to get one solid thought on a card, so they’re not especially deep. They are also, mostly, biased towards being one-way communication. Written on vacation, they can take days or weeks to reach their destination, by which time the sender has moved on to an unknown address so the tone is declarative and replies are rare. All of this sounds sort of like social media, facebook posts or tweets.
However, the resemblance is superficial, the differences bedrock fundamental. Despite being open, postcards are sent to one person (or for my dad’s lab postcards, to a group), and mostly, they are the only ones who see it. While they may not be deep, they do convey meaningful relationship—they are more expensive and time consuming to produce than texts. And while they can be hard to respond to directly, they are more permanent. In my dad’s lab, and in my house, they would get taped to a refrigerator or other surface and stay for years. While I look at these cards sent a hundred years ago, I doubt that any descendent of mine or yours will look at our texts a hundred years from now.
My grandparents had no way to post a photo on facebook, telling a hundred of their friends that they were having a great time in Ensenada but the entertainment was a bit risqué. They would tell the handful of postcard recipients; if they wanted to be more public, they would invite a bunch of folks over for a slide show after returning home. In the next generation, to communicate more broadly, my parents might also include something in their xeroxed end-of-the-year letter. The opportunity provided by social media is truly wonderful, and I try to imagine how my parents would have worked with it, if they could comprehend it. But it is a qualitatively different form of communication. I know that I write differently when I am writing to an individual or small group than when I am writing “publicly.”
So there is the trade—permanence, and a building a more direct personal relationship, in exchange for easily reaching a hundred people to say that the view from the hotel is nice but the food is expensive and made so-and-so sick.
Which brings me to box #2–a lot of blank postcards, and a nice pen. A lot of these cards are souvenirs. Despite writing a lot of postcards, my parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents bought more postcards than they sent, a practice I continue. They are good, cheap, easy-to-carry mementos, especially when cameras were clunky, film was troublesome, and you want a well-produced image of a place. Some of these cards were given away—airlines used to put them in the seat pouches along with the barf bags, and hotels would use them for advertising, and I have a lot of those. Another sizable bunch are of Los Angeles, from when our hometown pharmacy/stationer closed down and they were getting rid of stock. I also have a Parker 51 fountain pen that may have been a graduation gift for my mom, and writing with this pen is a sensuous experience, like getting exactly the right wax on your skis or wearing silk. It seems to me that it would be wrong not to put the cards and pen to use, like leaving a violin unplayed.
So, if I have your address, or if you send me your address, or send me a postcard, I’ll send you a random card (Ok, not totally random—I won’t send the ones my great-grandfather got in the Dutch East Indies, or their like). It will be a postcard, so don’t expect profundity (or legibility), but it will convey my regards, and you can keep it, if you will; the picture will at least be nice or amusing. Maybe you’ll send one back? Maybe in this age of tweets and texts and IM’s, can we resurrect the postcard and the distinctive connection it makes? I’m not going to abandon social media. I mean, this musing IS on social media, I’m not going to print out dozens of copies of it and send them individually to all my friends. But, it is so nice to get something in the mail that isn’t an advertisement or a bill. Why not greetings from a far-flung friend?

 Parental Artifact #24–tilework


This is not much to look at—some pleasing but not especially flashy tile work, in what was my mom’s bathroom. While it’s not much to look at, it’s something I think about often, sometimes every week.
My parents’ house underwent two major phases of remodeling and renovation. One was when I was extremely young—I can barely remember scattered details of how it was before. It made sense: my parents had just recently moved in, my dad had just started tenure, and it was clearly time for them to put their stamp on their own house and better meet the needs of their young family. The second big overhaul was at the other end of family life—my brothers were either in college or on their way, and I was in high school. It made sense: my parents, successful and in the ripeness of their careers, wanted to revise the house to suit their matured desires. This would have been over a period of a few years in the early 1980’s, When I was in high school.
The early ‘80’s were a period of change not just for my family, but for entire nations. About this time, my native city started getting the nickname “Teherangeles”. A repressive regime in Iran had led to the development of a substantial Persian émigré community, and when that repressive regime was overthrown by another even more repressive regime, that community grew considerably. I was a dumbass, self-centered high schooler. I had a couple of Persian classmates, but didn’t think much about them beyond the present tense, in which one was a really nice guy with a strange name and the other was an entitled prick with a strange name. Maybe I thought about the hostages in the US embassy a little, but I certainly did not think about oppression, torture, fundamentalism, theocracy, displacement, being a refugee, being a stranger, losing everything, and having to find everything again when you had already lived most of your life.
My mom wanted some changes to the bathroom we always thought of as “hers”. Since small children no longer needed bathing, a bath was no longer necessary. A bidet would be nice. And, just a small amount of decorative niceness would be nice, a step up from plainly functional, so some tile to replace linoleum. I don’t recall how decisions were made about fixtures and woodwork and tiling and contractors and so forth, being much more concerned about high school.
I do remember talking, briefly, with the contractor doing the tile work. He was an older guy—which is to say, he was probably about as old as I am now, thinning hair tending towards grey. His English was good, not great, but far better than my mastery of any second language. I enjoyed the diversion of watching him work, patiently and evenly setting tiles on the adhesive, carefully mixing and adding the grout. I don’t know why I asked him about how he came to do tile work; such a question was pretty uncharacteristic, given how self-centered I was as a teen. But he explained that he wasn’t always a tile-setter; he had been a medical doctor, a G.P., in Iran. He was doing well under the Shah, but…a lot of narrative was elided, and he said simply that he was here now, and getting a medical license was not possible for him. He knew how to do tile work, so that’s what he did.
His narrative didn’t make that much impact on me at the time. Somehow, though, it stuck. The older I’ve gotten—the closer I’ve gotten to his age—the more I learn about the tragic story of Persia, the more I learn about displaced persons, the more I learn about refugees, the more I learn about my grandfather’s emigration, the more I learn about loss, longing, alienation…the more I think about this man, once a successful doctor, now in a strange country on the far side of the world, speaking a strange language, doing hard, physical, and not especially prestigious labor. He seemed to be OK with it, but the calm waters must have been very, very deep.
I think one of the most universal human feelings is alienation. Even among the completely settled, once in a while there is a pang of “this just isn’t my real home.” If that feeling weren’t so widespread, I don’t think there would be any need for religion. If I ever get even the slightest feeling of that separation from my true home—and being human, that happens pretty regularly—the memory of the guy setting tile in my mom’s bathroom, kneeling over his work and getting pestered by an unthinking teenager, comes to mind unbidden, to admonish me. I don’t necessarily feel better, but I can at least take stock of my blessings.

 Parental Artifact #23–Anza-Borrego State Park




OK, so this is a little bit more nebulous than an artifact. I can’t hold it in the palm of my hand, and I can’t properly say that it is something I own (especially since I no longer pay taxes in the State of California). But, all the same, it is something that my parents gave to me and my brothers.
Anza-Borrego State Park can be readily defined. It has boundaries, it contains geographical and geological and cultural features that can be enumerated. The topological map seems to encompass all of it, flattened into two dimensions and given coordinates. Most geographies will note its features, and as I stand on its sandy soil or varied rocks, I can experience it in two dimensions, like an ant crawling across the surface of a wrinkly map. Some knowledge of geology adds a third dimension, as alluvial fans fill deep basins and faults plunge far into the earth. A little more knowledge of geology brings a fourth dimension, time, and the landscape becomes a snapshot of a vast opera of orogeny, metamorphosis, erosion, deposition, uplift and earthquakes.
The geographies of many indigenous peoples have an additional dimension, one that is like the deep time of western geologists, but thick in the air and as real as—or, on a personal level, more real—than the forces that turn mountains into sand dunes. It is a slurry of history, memory, experience, and lore that is every bit as real as rocks. This dimension is evidenced by place names. Western place names are about people, animals, or features—the park has Font’s Point, Palm Canyon, Coyote Creek, and so on. In contrast, in the indigenous geography, places are named after what happened that one time at that place. The past becomes a permanent part of the present, and time and geography get mixed into a chunky stew at places like “That wash where the VW bottomed out and we had to dig it out” or “The place where we filled bags with sand for mom’s cactus garden.”
That geography of memory is the Anza-Borrego State Park that my parents gave us. We started going there almost every winter for a few days’ vacation sometime in the 1970’s. There were things we could count on. Fried bread from the Coleman stove for breakfast, a hike up a wash or canyon or drive to see some unusual plant during the day, a lunch break of crackers and cheese and fruit and precisely divvied up chocolate, a return to camp for dinner, then reading in the light of the Coleman lantern, with planning what the next day’s adventure would be. We had a few guide books but Lindsay’s “The Anza Borrego Desert Region” was the go-to.
The trip I just took there, with my brothers and a group of friends, is quite similar. Some of the hardware is different (I have the old Coleman stove, but we used my middle brother’s newer stove; the light at night was provided by LED’s), but the rhythm is the same. We were only there for one full day on this trip. In the light of the lantern on Monday night, we consulted Lindsay (now in its sixth edition, though we still had the first), and we decided to try Hellhole Canyon for our walk the following day.
The map and the guidebook say Hellhole Canyon; in the geography of memory, it’s the one where mom tore her jacket on the tangle of catclaw that filled canyon, the one where we hiked down from the top that one time, the one where dad dropped us off and we walked all the way down the California Riding and Hiking trail, and much more. The memories were thick enough that they stepped on each others’ toes, and our memories argued amongst themselves about whether we could go down the canyon from the top to the bottom, or whether we ever actually did such a hike. We were pretty sure about tearing garments on the catclaw trees though.
So we parked some cars at the bottom of the canyon, then drove in others up to the top and started hiking down. After a couple of miles, the canyon grew steeper. And steeper. And steeper still; to keep going meant a lot of scrambling over huge boulders and the occasional short slide down a dry waterfall. Eventually I was sent on ahead to scout, and after a couple hundred meters I concluded that it might be doable but given the composition of our party, it should definitely not be attempted. So, we enjoyed the vista and declared lunch (crackers, cheese, an orange, and some chocolate). Sated, we turned back, and after a few hundred meters of scrambling over and around and under boulders, the canyon mellowed out and we had a pleasant walk back to the cars.
Brother Mig and I still had itchy feet, and there was about an hour and a half of sunlight left; so, from the cars at the bottom of the canyon, we decided we would try to reach at least as far as the palm oasis. It was some VERY brisk hiking, and some scrambling over boulders, but we got there and it was lovely. There was no surface water but the palm grove was thick and lush, and the palms shared the damp sandy soil with sycamores and willows. The oasis is such a surprise, a place of peace and fullness in the desert landscape, that it was tempting to linger too long there. Our return pace was even more up-tempo, with pauses to take in the fiery colors of the sunset as we zipped across the wash.
Nothing stays the same forever. The USGS topo map for Hellhole Canyon is pretty far out of date, not showing the highway or a couple of the trails. The first edition of Lindsay’s book is mostly up to date, but floods and fires rearrange things. The terrain of boulders differed from that in our memories, perhaps due to flash floods, and we encountered almost none of the catclaw that was so thick in previous visits, possibly owing to a fire of which we saw evidence.
But, walking through the landscape, I have changed it in my memory. I can now name new places—the place where we talked about gardens, the place where we had to squeeze under a boulder, and the dry pool where we had a delightful lunch. The geography of memory in Anza-Borrego is an especially rich inheritance from my parents, and dozens of its canyons and washes are full of things I can see that are not on any map; and with every visit I burnish and refresh and remodel this geography, and will hopefully continually to do so every chance I can.

 Parental artifact #22 (I think, it’s been a while) : a “Western” shirt



Given that it’s styled as “western” or “ranch” wear, I suppose it’s appropriate that I wear this on my farm in the West. It is one of a bunch of similar shirts that I inherited from my dad—very light weight cotton/synthetic blend, mother-of-pearl snap buttons, western-styled details such as the pocket flaps and collar. They cry out for a bolo tie or kerchief, and I often wear a bandana when I wear them. They are ideal for my work, providing protection against the sun and hay dust on a hot day without being too warm. They’ve gotten a lot of use, and are slowly succumbing to the indignities of farm life—mysterious stains, gruesome tears from getting caught on fences and the like, and a bit of fraying from being chewed on by goats.
These shirts date from the second-to-last chapter of my dad’s life—after retirement, after driving became kind of dicey, but before the fog of Alzheimer’s Disease grew so thick that he was permanently lost.
In a much earlier chapter in my parents’ shared life, when they were in college in the 1950’s, they enriched their lives by joining a couple of clubs. They were members of the UC Hiking Club, and hiking and the outdoors stayed a part of their life until almost the last chapter. Their time in this club produced hundreds of photos, dozens of lifelong friends, their marriage and three sons. They also did a lot of international folk dancing. I don’t recall them ever talking about a folk dance club, or friends from such a club. But, they knew lots of folk dances (I have fond memories of my mom trying and failing to teach me the Hambo), and I grew up listening to their LPs of international folk music (I still listen to some of these regularly—“Kolo Party” and “Bikel and Guill Sing Songs from Just About Everywhere” have been providing pleasure for going on five decades). Obviously folk dance was important to them as a social outlet, but I just don’t know how.
When I went off to college, my parents were pretty hands-off. Unlike some of my classmates, they didn’t place many regulations on what I could do, nor did they push me to do many specific things. The only injunction I remember was that I must not, under any circumstances, play bridge. The only things that they pushed on me were a weekly admonishment to “STUDY HARD,” the suggestion that I should meet and marry a [rich] doctor, and I should look into taking up folk dancing. In those four years, I never played bridge, I studied hard but never hard enough, I took up a hobby that helped me meet and marry a doctor…but I never took up folk dancing. During this time, they themselves did not dance, though they still were hiking and camping regularly with their club friends.
When I went to graduate school, my social situation was considerably different. I lived off campus, and while I met a few people as an avid bicyclist, I didn’t socialize much. When the weather was pleasant, there was a recreational folk dance club that I would do its thing out in one of the plazas, and some of the tunes were very familiar to me from my parents’ LPs. A friend, one of my fellow grad students, was there dancing with them, so after a few times watching them I figured, heck, I’ll give it a try.
Well, I liked it. I really, really liked it. After a few weeks, my friend commented that I danced like someone who really NEEDED to dance, and I suppose I did. During my time in grad school, I danced with the recreational club, and started dancing with the associated performing group. It just felt good. I loved the music, the motion, the rhythm, and most important, the society. There is something very essentially human about getting together in a circle or snaking line and moving in synchrony with a drumbeat—whether 2/4, 3/4, 5/4, or some exotic Bulgarian rhythm like 13/16. For ten years I was dancing twice a week or more.
My parents still hiked and camped a lot—though to be sure, they didn’t hike quite as far, and their camping got cushier. They had annual reunions with dozens of friends from their days in the Hiking Club, and went on hiking expeditions in Tasmania and New Zealand and other places. However, it was getting more difficult. My dad’s joints started crapping out on him, the unfortunate sequel to a back surgery that hadn’t worked well twenty years earlier. He developed a definite list to port, and would tend to want to hike uphill and to the left rather than downhill or to the right. My parents’ friends were aging too, and the Hiking Club reunions started tending more towards hanging out at a cabin with a smaller group of people and some mild walking rather than dozens of folks camping in tents and ten mile hikes.
I think my parents realized that, having retired, they needed to do something sociable. I don’t remember when they joined the square dance club that met at a nearby church (“Heels and Souls”), but it became a weekly event and a major social outlet for them. They formed new friendships and got a regular night out and some good exercise. As my dad’s joints got worse and his cognition started to decline, he still participated, looking after coffee and such. And, as members of the group, my mom got a square dance skirt and my dad got these shirts.
When I left grad school, first for a teaching gig and then for a postdoc, followed by another teaching gig, I completely stopped folk dancing. My social circle atrophied, as my work took over an increasing fraction of my life. As a postdoc, one mainly sees the four walls of the lab and the inside of the library. As a lecturer, one can socialize some with students—but definitely not too much. I rode my bike and skied a lot with my sweetie, and occasionally with a club, but the number of people I socialized with outside of work just plummeted.
A decade later I departed from academia and moved to this farm, and my parents’ condition deteriorated markedly. My dad mostly disappeared into the obscuring fog of dementia. My mom attended one more Hiking Club reunion, and it was a bit of a disaster as she was unsure of where she was and why her husband wasn’t there. They became more homebound, and stayed that way until their deaths, most of a decade later. Their last regular visitors were a couple they had known from the Hiking Club for over sixty years, and some newer friends from the Heels and Souls.
Here I am now, living and working on a goat farm in Oregon. In a typical week I will get off the farm once or twice, to go to town for feed and groceries, and maybe do some special errands as needed or go to the dump. Plenty of weeks I don’t talk to any other humans except my sweetie and the couple that works here. The farmer’s life can be extremely isolating. From March to July the farm is all-consuming, and for most of the rest of the year, dairying and farm work will keep one busy all the hours of the day. The isolation can play havoc with your psyche, and honestly, it has at times.
During the summer months, I wear these shirts that my dad got for square dancing. As did he, I trace out patterns of squares and lines and circles, but unlike him I am doing so in a tractor, mowing the pastures. As I drive around and milk and shovel manure and fix fences, I think about how he wore this shirt as part of a conscious, deliberate effort at socializing. I know it was difficult, but he knew that it was necessary.
Now that the pace of the year has slowed somewhat, and I can go to shows and fairs, I can socialize a little—but this is an odd sort of socialization, meeting with friends that live far away and that I see but a few times a year, at events that are dominated by the work of showing our animals. I communicate with a bunch of friends by email and various social networks. But it’s not really adequate. This shirt is telling me I should make an effort—maybe return, as my mom and dad did, to folk dance, or maybe join a music group. It’s ridiculously difficult to do this as a dairy farmer, but it was difficult for my dad, late in life with bad knees and hips and a fear of dementia, to meet new folks and learn to square dance.
I still haven’t played bridge. I still study hard, and it’s still never hard enough. I met, and married, a doctor, and we just celebrated our 25th anniversary. And, I think there is a contra dance group that meets every month around here.

 Parental Artifact #21–a darkroom lab notebook


I will probably be running into boxes labeled “Parents/Misc/???” for the next ten years. I was cleaning off my desk and ran into such a box containing some postcards, a proof coin set, printed emails (because my parents wanted to save them but couldn’t figure out how), a few receipts, and this lab notebook. It dates from 1981, when we were in Canberra, Australia, as my dad was spending a sabbatical year at the Australian National University.
At this time, my brothers and I were old enough that we didn’t require as much attention as when we were young, and my mom didn’t have a garden she could fuss over. Maybe she was bored, or felt a bit isolated, but after six months, she sought employment at the ANU. She found a position with a professor who was documenting the indigenous shipbuilding practices of Indonesia. She developed the film the professor had exposed, and made ink drawings for publications to support his descriptions. Illustration made good use of her talents, but darkroom work was foreign her. She didn’t much like it, and she didn’t much like the professor, who was bossy and not very appreciative.
This notebook is completely mundane. It has her notes on how to work in a darkroom, how to load exposed film into a developer tank, what precautions to take with chemicals. Beyond her neat handwriting and occasionally idiosyncratic spelling, there is little that makes this notebook speak of my mom. I was honestly surprised to see absolutely no doodles of flowers or weird faces, but then I remembered that her boss was unpleasant and probably didn’t tolerate such foolishness. It is as personally significant and meaningful as a Kodak a darkroom guide. Having been consulted daily for some months, then having been hauled halfway across the world, then having been stored safely for four decades, then having somehow eluded the purge boxes of so many similarly inconsequential papers, and having been moved to a farm in Oregon, it will end its existence as kindling for the fire that keeps my house warm this winter.
It is not a meaningful object. I’ve disposed of dozens of boxes of similar artifacts over the last few years. Why should I pause on this notebook?
If I am here with my beloved, I can look at her and see her, as a whole. I can move closer, and see a part in greater detail. I can get a loupe, and while I’d lose context, I’d see even more detail. Were she patient, I could examine her with a microscope. The microscopic examination of a square millimeter of skin would be meaningless, though. It wouldn’t tell me anything about her, it wouldn’t help me understand or love her more, and all I might see would be insignificant detail. But, I can, in principle, reach across the breakfast table on a Saturday morning and look as deeply as I want at any part of her. There is a sense of real-ness that this gives to me; she is tangible, visible, and detailed at every scale I wish to examine.
This notebook allows me to do this with my mom, in a way. I can zoom in, down to the pixel level, on the random date of March 3, 1981. Never mind that what I am seeing has less significance than a single dot in a Seurat painting or a square millimeter of my sweetheart’s skin. If I have that ability to zoom in at that specific point, maybe I can do that anywhere, for any date? Maybe I can have that same sense of real-ness and infinite detail that I can have about the living? And If I burn this notebook, don’t I lose that sense?
Of course this is illusory. Accepting the death of a person I have been close to is, partly, relinquishing their physical actuality, and replacing it with a story or a painting composed from memory. This composition is no more static than a painting that keeps getting touched up as long as the artist keeps it in the studio. The mere act of remembering changes memories, the phrasing of a sentence gets tweaked, a line in a picture gets refined every time they are considered. It’s rare—to the point of being upsetting—that something can emerge and change the overall composition.
A good portrait is more than pixels of pigment or dots of paint. A good portrait is also categorically different from a living person. It is not infinitely detailed, nor should it be. You can’t zoom in, arbitrarily deeply, on any point. A good portrait maybe doesn’t even look exactly like the living person. However, it should capture what is important about that person to the artist. So, in making a mental portrait of my mom to carry with me, now that she is deceased for some years, this notebook isn’t needed or desirable. A single pixel such as this notebook isn’t nearly as meaningful as a strong brushstroke such as “she had an artistic bent, could get bored, but was methodical, and bridled under bossy and inconsiderate people.”
The years-long decline of dementia and the passage of some years since her death have given me ample time to compose and refine the picture I carry of my mom. It is a pleasing composition, a good story. It’s not finished, nor will ever be. As I grow old and my memory fills—or, as I fear, it evaporates in the siege of Alzheimers—the portrait will probably become simpler, or perhaps more pure and symbolic. For now, it is fairly rich, though there are places without detail: the relationship she had with her brother, whether she was frustrated or satisfied with the role she played as the wife of a professor, the mother of a family.
I have yet a few boxes of letters and juvenilia to go through. I hope they will provide a few of those missing details, though I doubt the composition will change much. If they do add to the story, it’s likely that I will preserve some of these scraps. I will also, as I go through all her papers and belongings, keep running into things like this notebook, stray pixels and footnotes that do nothing to advance character, action, or atmosphere. Like a good editor or an artist at the easel, I will discard them.

 Parental Artifact #20–some good cookies.


It’s not a day for heavy thoughts, so I’m not going to go all Proust with these cookies setting off several volumes of memories. Sometimes, to paraphrase Freud, a cookie is just a cookie. And so these are. The recipe is from my mom’s mom. I lost the recipe when we moved from Kalamazoo to Sacramento: the one box that the moving company didn’t deliver had our recipe box and hanukkiah and a few other treasures. Twenty years earlier, I think my mom may have lost the recipe as well: in her papers we found a 1980 letter from her mom, my grandmother, with the recipe written on a scrap of newspaper with an article about eating insects. The scrap also had a note, “Just to keep you up to date—other culinary hints.”
My mom made these for us when my brothers and I were kids, long before she apparently lost the recipe and needed that letter from my grandma. By the time that happened, she would have been making them not for us but for her coworkers, or for a club. My mom didn’t love cooking, but had skills, and when it was required of her she could make quite a good pie or cake or other treat. She also ably assisted when I wanted to learn how to bake for my junior high school Home Ec class. I don’t remember much of my grandmother’s cooking, other than that she didn’t love cooking either, and wasn’t that great at it. But I have this recipe from her, and whether or not she was the creator of it, I think that it pretty much absolves both mom and grandma of any and all culinary sins.
(The recipe probably dates to from when my mom was a kid, as it references a highly annoying novelty pop song from 1943. It would be roughly equivalent to naming a recipe “YUMMMbop”. Link in notes; you’re welcome to the earworm.)
Mare Z Dotes
3 c quick oats [ed. note—if you use rolled oats, they’ll be more work to eat, but make a more crispy cookie. I usually go with quick oats, they hang together better]
1 c flour
1 c brown sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1 c butter or oleo, melted
1/4 c boiling water
1 t baking soda
Mix together oats, flour, sugar, and salt. Add melted butter or oleo and mix together well. Dissolve the baking soda in the boiling water and add, mixing well. Vanilla or cinnamon can be added to taste. Form the dough into a 1.5 - 2 inch roll in wax paper and place in freezer.
Preheat oven to 350-375, slice the dough thin (about 1/4” or less), and bake 5-10 minutes [it depends on how thin you slice them. Keep an eye on ‘em]. They can be baked as drop cookies but they’re not as good that way. [I freeze up several short rolls—that way I can just bake a few at a time. It’s not like there are three growing boys here.]
Really, you should make some of these, they’re good. They’re a treasured part of my inheritance that you are completely welcome to! Or share a grandparental recipe of your own in the comments. It’s a good time of year for such things.

 Parental Artifact # 19–a postcard of a 747 from QANTAS.



I’m not sure when this card entered the collection; it would either have been the 1972 return from my dad’s sabbatical in New Zealand, or the 1980 return from the sabbatical in Australia. At that time, airlines were pretty liberal with distributing things to help their passengers pass time during flights. My parents being the sort who never rejected a freebie and didn’t throw away things, when we cleaned up their house, we found playing cards from Malaysian Airlines, combs and toothbrush kits from Singapore Airlines, a few pieces of cutlery from SAS, as well as all these postcards, many from airlines that have left that great departure lounge in the sky.
I was reminded of this card today, as I read that the last Boeing 747 has just rolled off the assembly line (see link in comments). I am a bit over a year older than the 747 (though it had a significantly longer gestation than I did). I can’t tell you how many miles I’ve travelled, how many oceans and continents I’ve crossed riding comfortably in one of these incredible machines. Even though neither the 747 nor I are being produced any more, there are hopefully decades of service left for both of us. But to be sure, as far as the 747 is concerned, this is definitely the end of an era in travel. And, as much as any vehicle, the 747 functions as a symbol for something fundamental about how my parents brought me up, and reading this news gave me pause.
My brothers and I were raised as international travelers. When my parents went to Argentina for my father’s postdoctoral fellowship, my oldest brother traveled there as a babe in arms. He was walking well for the return trip; for that journey it was my middle brother who flew as a babe in arms (The culture of air travel was quite different then. Apparently my middle brother was such a cute baby that one of the stewardesses on the flight had no compunction about seizing the ¡Guapo bambino! and carrying him up the aisle to bring into the cockpit and show the pilot). I was five for my first big flight, when we all got on a 747 and flew, by way of Hawai’i, Samoa, and Fiji, to New Zealand for my dad’s first sabbatical year.
Since that trip, I have spent a lot of time spent on airplanes—from the Antipodes to Asia, every continent but South America, in everything from DC-3s to 747s, most recently to France in a 777. I’ve waited for luggage in airports that are sleek and hi-tech, and in sheds by unpaved airstrips. To this day, my sleep regularly brings dreams of travel—of the in between-space of the airport, of being on an airplane and expecting to be somewhere, of being in a hotel and going to see something new.
The experience of travel is core to who I am. Travel (and it must be stressed, voluntary travel, not the flight of a refugee) is the greatest gift my parents gave me. No book, no virtual reality experience, no movie could have given me the same experience of alighting, somewhat disoriented, in a foreign land and realizing that every person who is speaking unintelligibly and who looks and acts differently from me is normal, and that I am the weirdo. Seeing the sights is grand—I can’t oversell that—but for becoming a whole human, for developing empathy, you can’t beat traveling, finding that you are the weirdo, and somewhat helpless to boot. That is a gift from my parents for which I am eternally grateful. I am all the more grateful when I talk with many of my neighbors who have seen so little of the world—no more than a trip to Disneyland, or some city in America for a convention. I’ve met some that have never left Oregon in their entire lives. Their views are constrained, and their embrace of humanity barely goes to the horizon.
I don’t know if wanderlust is heritable, but it is strong in my family. One of my brothers has very itchy feet and pretty much always wants to be overseas (though it’s gotten very expensive). The other has taken a few trips abroad as well, most recently France and the Galápagos Islands. Of course, our parents kept traveling after my brothers and I left the nest, flying to Australia, New Zealand, South America, South Africa, Central America, and I forget where else. All this travel, of course, was by air.
Before my parents, my grandparents also did quite a bit of traveling. However, their voyages preceded the jet age. Travel then was so different that I have a hard time comprehending it. We have an artifact of that time, the equivalent of a carry-on bag, a thing to carry the stuff a traveler would need during the trip to the destination: an enormous steamer trunk. Steamers took my grandparents to Europe, Asia, and South America. I remember visiting my mom’s parents when the ship they were on—the SS Oriana—stopped in Long Beach on the way to parts south. Some of my great grandparents traveled extensively as well, a little over a hundred years ago (some voluntarily, some less so, but all by steamship). I’m amazed, when I think about all that was required for travel at that time—the planning, the logistics, the flexibility, the trust.
Obviously, then, I have to complement the engineers behind the 747 and its like, who made it possible for an upper-middle-class family of five to travel around the world so easily. Every time I’ve gone from one country to another—with the exception of a couple childhood drives to Tijuana—it has been by air. Transoceanic travel by steamer is mostly a thing of the past, and for sixty years the jet has been “shrinking the world.” The phasing out of the 747, combined with the growing awareness of the threat of climate change, though, makes me wonder if we are in for another change in how we travel.
Here I am now: my travels have left my feet quite firmly planted in the soil of a farm in rural Oregon. Travel is mostly in my past. The last time I used a passport was twenty years ago, and nowadays my very infrequent flights are for family visits, not to experience strange lands. Farms are very difficult to leave for any length of time. Also, the thought of burning gallons of aviation fuel on a warming planet, just for my own recreation, further dampens any wanderlust that I may still have.
Still, every so often, my sweetie and I speculate about places overseas we’d like to see (Australia again, and New Zealand, and France, and the Shetland Isles…), but these pipedreaming sessions have grown less frequent. We have no children who need the broadening experience of travel. If I’m being honest with myself, I would say that it is now an even probability that I’ll never use a passport again. The 747 and I came on the scene at about the same time, and it was, thanks to my parents, the vehicle for so much of my education and growth. It feels appropriate, as I have become more earthbound, that the 747 begins to fade from the scene.
Ave atque vale, 747.

 Parental artifact #18–a 12-place set of Heath Ware


My parents acquired this service partially as a wedding present, partially as a purchase, in 1958. My mom noted in her handwritten catalog of possessions that it was “considered quite classy.” As a young couple my parents were keen on “mid century modern” design, with its spare elegance, and a number of their furnishings—lamps, tables and chairs, ceramics, chests of drawers—fit that aesthetic. However, as they got older, as kids multiplied, and as they inherited things from relatives who were less simpatico with their vision, stylistic coherence waned. Mid century modern bumped into mission and Victorian and ranch and more. Despite this, I think they kept a fondness of the clean aesthetic of that style.
This service was always the “good” china, rarely used. Two other sets of china lived through complete lives, from purchase to piecemeal destruction, as my two brothers and I went from babies to adults, and as my parents went from adults into the fog of Alzheimer’s. But the Heath ware remained inviolate. Even though (or perhaps because) it was only used rarely, it acquired a thick patina of emotional significance and memory for all of us over the years.
When it came time to apportion my parents’ chattels, most of the job was relatively easy. However, we brothers have a shared spreadsheet labeled “grand bargains/horse trading” that was our effort at dealing with those really significant items that we all felt strongly about. The Heath Ware was on that list, along with The Microscope, the cactus painting, the Ceropegia painting, the silk dragons, and a handful of other items. These are objects that I think were so internalized as part of our personal identity as individuals, but individuals within a family, that relinquishing them felt like relinquishing a piece of one’s own anatomy.
So there was some bargaining, some horse trading, and some strong emotions; and while I do not have the microscope or the cactus painting, I do have the Heath ware. Its emotional and aesthetic desirability is combined with practical appeal: the china we had been using, a treasured wedding present from Duva’s sister, was starting to decay, its glaze failing under the assaults of the microwave and the dishwasher. The Heath Ware has become our daily service. We have a set of plain Corelle plates for Pesach, but no “good” china as such. If you dine with us, you will eat off of what was my parents’ good china.
Shortly after bringing the Heath Ware into our kitchen, I was loading the evening’s dishes into the dishwasher and I had a most unusual sensation: I was carefully placing a plate into the rack, and superimposed on top of that mundane experience, a much older version of myself, with pale, aged, and slightly shaky hands, was accidentally dropping that same plate and watching it break.
I was just starting to register that this was odd when I also experienced:
—carefully getting the Heath Ware plates out for our weekly dinner with Grandaddy when I was five, an event which was routine, but kind of special.
—serving our parents a cake for their 50th anniversary in 2008, and using the Heath Ware because it was a special event. Even if my dad was already starting to fade in dementia’s fog, he understood the significance.
—having my favorite cake served on the large plate for my eighth birthday, and feeling important for that.
—noticing that the posh restaurant at which Duva and I were celebrating our anniversary used the same plates, but in a different color.
—pointedly not getting the Heath Ware plates out for our weekly dinner with Grandaddy, well before his death, but at some point in time when the dinners became less special and more routine.
—watching, in my PJ’s, after I was supposed to be in bed, as my parents entertain some important guests with a fancy dinner off the good plates and at the special table—with a tablecloth, even!
I can’t say that I experienced all these things simultaneously, because that word implies that they took place at the same point in time, in an ordered sequence of events. Rather, while I was holding that plate in my hand, I got a view of time from the outside, from a position where events were not sequential; they just existed, stacked on top of each other in no order. It was instantaneous, a flashbulb illuminating a different reality.
Can baked earth give a transcendent vision of reality? I suppose if you were amongst Abraham’s ancestors, before he scorned idols, it might provide some connection with the divine, but that notion has been rejected since.
At any rate, without any interruption, I finished the motion of loading that plate into the dishwasher. I didn’t drop it, it didn’t break. That particular event is, I guess, in some version of my future.
Nothing is permanent, that’s an obvious lesson, but I had a lot more to think about. Maybe it was a piece of ceramics trying to explain the world to me; maybe it was my parents, reaching out to reassure me from wherever they may be; maybe it was a momentary slosh of neurotransmitters between different regions of my brain, triggered by strong but suppressed emotion. No matter. An alternative view of time can be useful in coping with the turmoil of history’s march of “one damn thing after another.”
I went for a hike along the North Umpqua Trail a few days back, from Steamboat Creek, downstream a couple of miles. This area was devastated by the Archie Creek Fire two years ago. The walk was profoundly, deeply disturbing. There were very very few live trees, and what I remembered as a hike through a mature forest of towering cedars and three-hundred-year-old firs was now a dismal tour through a morgue of disfigured, tortured corpses. I won’t live to see this be a mature forest again. No one alive today will see it as a mature forest either.
It is proper for me to be sad for what has been destroyed. If I stay within linear time, I’ll stay sad about it. Linear time bestows upon you a sense of loss—before, there was a forest, or one’s parents, healthy and vital. Now, and for all the rest of my march through linear time, they are gone. There’s not much comfort there; at best, I can say that there is a spur to action. If I want to do the work of repairing a broken world, planting trees, restoring trails, taking action against climate change—“better” is something that I can only see in linear time. But there will always be that sense of loss. As it is written, “it is not for you to see the work finished; nor are you free to cease the labor.”
My parents’ Heath Ware, though, seems to have offered me an alternative view, a refuge from this sense of loss. If I can be in this destroyed forest, and see it from outside time, I may not exactly be comforted, but I can at least not take it personally. The forest, my parents, both in their bloom, are as real as the “present,” always right there for me.