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May 04, 2008

"From Lively to Sin Vacas" (c) 2008

"From Lively to Sin Vacas" © May 2008 Stu Jenks

    [Images from top to bottom: "The Last Chair, Lively, Virginia", "The Flowering Oaks, Lively, Virginia, "Ancient Oak, Lively, Virginia", "Harriman, Tennessee", "Minnie Pearl's Hat, Ryman Auditorium, Nashville, Tennessee", "Mary at the Cadillac Ranch, Amarillo, Texas", "The Very Large Array, New Mexico", "Panoramic Cadillac Ranch, Amarillo, Texas", & "Cattle and The VLA"]

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        We had just had a perfectly nice little box lunch at an Interstate rest stop in the Valley of Virginia. No harsh words. No crazy comments. No imagined slights from us. Then, as my mother was getting a scarf out of the car, preparing to walk over and get back into the Penske truck, she said to me.
    "You know, after Pamela was born I had a miscarriage and I fought to have another child, so remember that, the next time you get upset with me!"
    I shrugged my shoulders, gave Annie a crooked smile with a slight shake of the head and walked my elderly mother back to the truck.
    And this was Day Two of what turned out to be a week-long journey, driving my mother and her things to an independent living place, near my home in Tucson, Arizona.

    I thought it would be fun, driving Miss Daisy across the country. It was anything but. When Annie arrived, ten days before we were going to leave for Arizona, she was prepared to do a lot of work, packing my mother up. What she didn't know was that in the months leading up to the move, Mom hadn't done a thing. When I arrived three days before we departed Virginia, Annie had done an amazing job, in spite of everything.
    Even though I had been to The River to visit at Christmas, I had no idea how much my mother had begun to fade. She started out the day as a woman in her eighties and ended the day as a six-year-old child. When friends would ask me, on the phone, how my mother was, I would say she was 'petulant'.
    But my mother’s old, and it's not her fault that she has become more of a spoiled brat. She has always been this way. But now, she was ruder, more insulting, and more manipulative that I've ever seen her. She’s never been one to apologize or try and walk in anyone else's shoes, but now it was all or nothing, black or white, good or bad, with no gray in between. And the All was All Her. We either loved her or hated her, and she wasn't shy to say anything now. [Like she ever was.] And even though it was never her intent to be hurtful, that didn't mean it didn't hurt. [Whether a truck runs over you by accident or on purpose, you've still been run over by a truck.] Add to that the entitlement issues in her DNA and the occasional histrionic tears and you've got a nightmare for Annie and I.

    Miraculously, we got the 26-foot Penske truck on the road on Friday Afternoon, with Mother and Annie following in Mom's Buick Le Sabre. We made it as far as Charlottesville, Virginia that night.
    Besides the little adventure caused by me getting the truck stuck in the parking lot of the motel, (I embedded the rear end into the pavement while trying to go up a little hill. Had to get a tow truck to wince it free), the first day's drive was uneventful and rather pleasant for me. For me. Not for Annie. For Annie had Mom in the car with her, for hours. After Day One, Annie and I traded off my mother. Day Two, Mom rode with me. Day Three, she rode with Annie, etc. That way, we each had every other day without the presence of my mother.
    When Mom doesn’t get her way, either she is wrong, you are wrong, or all of us are wrong. There is no simple difference of opinion in my mother's world. If you disagree with her, you hate her. If you are angry at some behavior of hers, you hate her. If you ask for something that she doesn't want to give, you hate her. I wish I could say this was new, but it isn't. It's just more so.
    Also, Mary puts people into two groups, those she considers family and those she doesn't. If you are considered family, then you are obligated to do what ever she asks. You are her servant, her peasant, her slave. And if you refuse, politely or no, she gets mad and either insults you or tries to shame you into doing what she wants. Again, not new. Just more desperate and pitiful these days. (Then again, my mother’s ancestors did own slaves and she was raised by black servants. Perhaps I expect too much.)

    The manipulations and criticism started long before we left Lively, Virginia.
    By the time we reached Tennessee, Mom was saying she wanted to go back home to Virginia or go to Raleigh and live with my sister, Pamela. (Not an option, now or ever.)

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    In Nashville, she thought she was in Richmond, Virginia. Truly. She thought we were on Broad Street, seconds after we had left the Ryman. Thought the Mosque was just up ahead. ‘What the fuck,’ I silently mouthed to Annie in the rear view mirror, as we drove back to the Interstate.

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    In Arkansas, she tried to jump out of the car. We affectionately call it The Arkansas Incident. We were driving slow and it was at night, so no one got hurt.
    By Oklahoma, we couldn't stand to even think of eating dinner with my mother. We prepared food for her to eat and brought it to her room at sundown, and then Annie and I went out and had our own dinner.
    I took some pictures of Mom at the Cadillac Ranch near Amarillo, Texas that turned out to be somewhat iconic. Thanks God for that.

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    By Santa Rosa, New Mexico, she was weeping in the hallway of the motel, saying we were abandoning her.
    The Very Large Array was fun for Annie and I, and we even had one lighthearted moment with Mom. The sustained winds were 40 miles per hour that day and as we were walking Mother to the Visitors Center, one of us on each arm so she wouldn't blow away, Mary said, with a bit of wonder in her voice,
    "Son, you are really taking me on an adventure."
    We all three laughed. The one and only time that would happen in 2500 miles.

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    I could say more. I probably should have said less. Bottom Line: Mary is all settled in at Sin Vacas, an upscale retirement village, where all the street names are in Spanish for nutty things. ('Street Without Sin', 'Street Without Denial', 'Street Without Danger'. Mom lives on Calle Sin Envidia: 'Street Without Envy'. And Rancho Sin Vacas, the gated community where the elderly village is, means Ranch Without Cows.) She’s making some new friends and going to church. She's slowly learning how to get to the bank and to the grocery store. And she’s even saying thank you to me when I come up to help connect the computer or put together a lamp (Even though I know her 'thank yous' really mean 'please don't leave me all alone'.)
   
    Mom and I don't really get along. Haven't really for years. I tolerate her and she probably tolerates me too.   
    But one piece of advice or rather a warning to all.
    Don't say to me "You're being such a good son."
    I'm not. And if you say it to my face, I’m probably going to get pissed off.
    I didn't move Mom because I'm being a good son. I did it because Mom begged me to move her to Arizona, and that we had few options left, for Mary can't really take care of herself anymore without help.
    I told Mom a number of times, that I really didn’t think it was a really good idea to leave 100 friends in Virginia behind, to live near her son and her 92-year-old sister and her son's ex-girlfriend in Arizona. But we have a saying in my family: "Mary does whatever Mary wants to do." Her so-called friends in Virginia, most of them rich, white, arrogant fucks, call Mom ‘a force of nature.’ They are not complementing her.
    No, I'm not a good son.
    I'm not doing this because I want to, or that I even think it's the right thing for her to live in Tucson, but our choice are limited now.
    Retirement places in Virginia are much more expensive there than in Arizona.
    My sister Pamela lives in Raleigh, in the Old Home Place, but she is fighting cancer and is really in no condition to be around Mom, in a number of ways.
    It's by default that I'm doing this, have done this.
    I'm not a good son.
    I'm just the person who’s doing what needs to be done.
    That's all.
    If I had my way, Mary would be living in Virginia somewhere.
    But you rarely gets your way if you are with my mother.
    It's Mom's way or the highway, pretty much.
    Even though she would deny that.

Cadillacranch1    “Your hair is so beautiful,” she says.   
    “You’re as handsome as your father was,” she says.
    Mom is over the top with her compliments now. I’m repairing a chest-of-drawers in her new apartment. She’s following me around.
    She may be a bit sun-downy these days. She may be her normal Narcissistic self, but she isn’t stupid. She knows she fucked up. She knows Annie and I are pretty tired of her shit.
    Phase One is done: Mary and her stuff have been moved across the country.
    Phase Two is mostly done: Unpacking Mary’s shit and getting her settled in.
    Now, on to Phase Three: Maintaining Mom in Tucson.
    Once-a-week visits and occasional chats on the phone is the plan. My plan. Her plan would be for me to be at her beck and call, 24 / 7 / 365. That ain’t going to happen.

    The view from her balcony is fabulous. City lights in the distance at night. An arroyo filled with birds and their songs during the day. I close my eyes and hear the quails’ sing. I feel sad. Mom doesn’t even notice the beauty right in front of her. I open the sliding glass door and reenter her apartment. She yells something at me from the bedroom. I can’t hear what she is saying. I don’t really care.

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February 26, 2008

"The Goddess Kali at Cold Harbor Battlefield" (c) 2008

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"The Goddess Kali at Cold Harbor Battlefield, Virginia" (c) 2007, 2008 Stu Jenks


    When I fly to The River, I land in Richmond, the Capital of the Confederacy. I rent a car or a truck and take a short cut through the thick woods to hook up with Route 360, avoiding the Interstate completely. Along the way, I skirt the Malvern Hill and Cold Harbor National Battlefields. And these days when I'm returning to Richmond International after a visit to the Rappahannock, I stop at Cold Harbor and pay my respects. What were mostly open fields in June of 1864 are now hardwoods and pines growing up from the old eroding earthworks. But the Park Service did leave the largest field of battle tree-free. So unlike most small Civil War battlefields, it still looks close to how it was 140 years ago.
    First time I came here in the 1990's, I cried hard, as much for my dying father as for the ghosts of the Union dead. Today, I just stopped and made a couple of cell phone calls, finished my Diet Coke and took a few time-travel shots of a hundred-year-old poplar tree. It's overcast today with a sprinkling of rain. It's a damp cold that seeps into the bones. A nice change from the desert cold I'm used to but I'm happy that I don't live here anymore, for a good number of reasons, not just the cold or the mosquitoes. I haven't called The South home for over twenty years. But I know the speech. I understand the people. Yet my heart resides atop a Mesquite-covered hill north of Tucson.
    But no matter where my heart lives, I am a Son of Virginia nonetheless. I have a burial plot of my own, that I may or may not use, at St. Mary's Whitechapel in Lively, Virginia, and I am happy that I have the option to eternally rest in the Old Dominion (even though my guess is my friends will take my ashes to Owl's Head instead.) I love Collard greens, Krispy Kreme donuts and Camel cigarettes and I relate well to people who pray. And I have a hard time with hardcore Yankees from New York City who think they are smarter than me, just because they were born above the Mason-Dixon line. And when someone mentions the name of Robert E. Lee, I instinctively nod my head and lower my eyes.
    I am a Son of Virginia and here at Cold Harbor, for just a few days in 1864, we were victorious. Not that Slavery or State Rights were just causes. It's just nice to remember a moment when Virginia won.


[For my information about the Battle of Cold Harbor, go to the Wikipedia link at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Cold_Harbor. It's a good and accurate site.]

 

January 19, 2008

"The Biscuit Swirl" (c) 2008

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"The Biscuit Swirl, Mustang Mountains, Arizona" (c) 2008 Stu Jenks

[Part of the ongoing Time Travel series. Fun Fact: Everything is done in-camera, using long exposures, zooming-out of the lenses and wrist-cranking the camera. Only PhotoShopping that is done, is for enhancing the color and popping the contrast.]

January 15, 2008

"Lincoln in Time" (c) 2008

Lincolnintime2"Lincoln in Time, Washington, D.C." © 2008 Stu Jenks

Mom and I may have just seen the name of a distant cousin of mine, on the walls of the Vietnam War Memorial. She's not really sure. She says she'll check. I choked anyway, for a relative I never knew, taking a picture of James J. Jenks Jr.'s etched name in the reflective black marble. Mom seemed somewhat unimpressed with The Wall. You have to understand. She grew up with the Jefferson, Washington and Lincoln Memorials with all their size and grandeur. (Literally, she grew up with them, having been born and raised just across the Potomac in Alexandria, Virginia.) A black gash in the earth she doesn't quite get, being Old School as she is. But I'm a baby boomer, a man who publicly protested the Vietnam War when I was a kid and who pretty much hates all stupid wars, Vietnam being on top of the list with The Civil War being a close second and The War on Terror, a not too distant third. I get The Wall. But no judgment toward Mom. She is who she is, born of a generation that loves the large visual stroke, not so much the subtle symbolic gesture.

We leave The Wall and walk the short distance to the steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

"I'm going to go up and take a few pictures of Abe. You be alright here for a few minutes?" I ask.

"I'm fine. Go ahead," says Mary.

"You don't want to come, do you?" thinking Mom's having a hard time just navigating the curbs much less the tall steps of the Lincoln Memorial.

"No. No. I'm fine."

The sun's an hour from going down. It's clear and crisp this Christmas week in D.C., but not too cold. Canada geese fly overhead. I climb the stairs to where the large sculpture of the Seated Lincoln resides. People are everywhere, and they seem to be folk from many lands. I hear French, German, Japanese, Australian English and what sounds like a Middle Eastern language. Everyone and their mother's son are taking pictures of their families at the feet of Lincoln. It is a cluster fuck, but a pleasant one, a happy frenzy. I then walk to the southern part of the monument where the Gettysburg Address is carved large in the walls. Hardly anyone is here. Just one or two of us. I find the shot and take it. I then take it twice and three times. I want this shot, more that I wanted The Wall shot. The word 'Devotion' has struck me this time, etched in a very large, very beautiful font. I back away from the wall and take a few minutes to just be with the words. All the words.

I quietly thank Abe for all he did, as I leave, and head down the marble steps to Mom. She's just where I left her.

"Ready, Mom?"

"Yes, I am."

"Having fun while I was gone?"

"I was starting to get cold. That bench is icy cold."

I smile. "Well, let's head back to the truck."

"OK."

Mom doesn't move too fast these days and it helps her to take my arm as we walk. It feels nice to have Mary on my arm. Being the good son and all. As we slowly stroll, Mom tells me a story from her childhood.

"When I was a teenager, we used to take the bus over from Alexandria on Saturdays. You know we didn't like Lincoln too much. So my friends and I would climb up into Abe's lap and shake our fingers at him, saying 'Shame on you, Abe. Shame.' We were the only ones here. Just my friends and I." She pauses. "No, son, this isn't my favorite Memorial."

"Which one is your favorite?"

"I'm quite fond of the Jefferson Memorial myself," she says with a little smile on her face.

As we walk I think of when my mother was a kid. It was the 1930's. Washington, D.C. was a small town then. Truly. It wasn't until World War Two that D.C. became a city. And my mother isn't exaggerating. She and her girlfriends were here by themselves. Just some Southern girls who didn't like the man who started the War of Northern Aggression. Mom clutches my arm as we slowly walk to the truck. I smile as we walk.

Mary Elton Saum is a Daughter of Virginia. Always has been. Always will be. And will continue to be, after she's dead and buried. It's a good thing.

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January 09, 2008

"For The Love of Wally" (c) 2007, 2008

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"For The Love of Wally" (c) 2007, 2008 Stu Jenks

[Another Time Travel shot, this one in memory of William Wallace Gordon, cat.]

"Belle Isle, Virginia: The Lone Tree" (c) 2008

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"Belle Isle, Virginia: The Lone Tree" (c) 2008 Stu Jenks

[Part of the ongoing Time Travel Series]

January 08, 2008

"Historyland Highway" (c) 2008

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"Historyland Highway, Lancaster County, Virginia" (c) 2008 Stu Jenks

[Part of the ongoing Time Travel Series]

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