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Well they
confiscated my
9/10th empty saline
spray from my
carry-on in the last
leg of the return
flight from Manila,
so I am having to
scrounge through the
medicine cabinet at
home. Found an old
prescription allergy
pump bottle, gave
myself a couple of
squeezes. I've
been home for about
36 hours—that
medication poleaxed
me.
I woke up starving
and as I'm going
downstairs to the
kitchen, I realize
shit I could talk
again without
coughing. Even
though I
shouldn't push
my luck, I'm
gonna follow this
thought verbally
cause you know the
whole fucky typing
thing. Anyway.
Facing the process
of letting go.
I've talked
about this before,
how you can know
someone for multiple decades and then see them in real time slipping away.
It started with the humming.
Granted, this is not
somebody that
I've ever really
truly had an apology
from. Like, hey I
hurt your feelings
oops sorry. Nah
that's a West
Coast thing and
I'm from New
York. Yet we
kept on and I went
through my worst
bits with her. For
Chrissake, J was my
roomie in college
for one semester,
prolly got
tear-gassed together
at least once. She
was there when I met
my first guy,
through the arrivals
of all three kids,
the foibles of my
crazy brothers one
of whom she even
very briefly dated,
the break-up of my
parents, then loss
of first guy. She
actually was dating
my second guy, and
when she was done
with him, there was
a cordial handoff.
Those guys are both gone and now she's going too.
Actually, back up a
few months. When I
announced this
current choir tour
to the family, as a
sidebar I said oh
yeah by the way, J
has signed up as
well so I'll
have a built-in
roommate instead of
the usual carefully
curated assignment
from Mark. My
sister-in-law who
has two sisters that
drive her crazy,
remarks wow I
don't know if I
would've gone
that way. She just
invited herself?
I said well yeah
sort of; plus we get
discounts with more
tour members. SIL is
like humpf. I
dismissed it, but in
retrospect, I blew
right past my quiet
dread.
Back up another
decade and a half,
and there's an
email with large
letters and
whimsical format of
colored fonts,
announcing the
impending brain
surgery J has
scheduled. It's
a meningioma that apparently can sit there quietly until it either kills you or moves to a spot that's way too vulnerable to ignore like eyesight in this case. So under the knife she goes. Good news it's not cancerous. Bad news is even though it's gone there's a long rehab.
Me and the old man
do the requisite
visit, have lunch at
her place where her
sister and BIL are
temporarily staying
with her
post-surgery. My
recollection is she
seems fine, slowed
down, but she's
still there.
There's gonna be
an impact,
unspecified, but
probably only really
obvious as time goes
by and the data
emerges.
Before I go on, let's back up a sec to 25 years ago.
My mom and I are in
the thick of it.
She’s still
hiding her drinking
and holding court at
the local
farmers’
market on Sunday
mornings, feeling
her oats, but I
think—man this
makes me
sad—she's
coming to a slow
realization that
something
ain’t right.
Her health issues
are accumulating
like a fucking ball
rolling down hill
and all the
well-meaning medical
types just
can’t stop
it. So naturally,
she gets a little
defensive every once
in a while. One time
though she takes
this left turn
during a phone
conversation and
basically—and
I swear to God
I'm not making
this up—she
says in this
exasperated tone
that maybe I could be
alittle bit more like my friend, the one who had an affair with my dad. She blurts out she's a better daughter.
As convoluted as
this sounds,
it's based on
some carefully
curated and weird
new age shit, past
lives, reincarnation
and such. I’ve
heard it before,
I’m not
buying it, and for
her, it’s a
pretty sore spot
that I was never on
that parallel track
of spiritual
exploration. I said
you want a different
daughter? Knock
yourself out. Hung
up the goddam phone.
I was weeping when I
tried to vent about
this in a phone call
the next day with J.
She took my
mother's side.
Not directly, of
course; details not
important, but
essentially you
don't honor your
parent by gossiping
about them was the gist of it. You get over it and move on. That and I knew she had lost her mom unexpectedly a few years earlier.
So here we are in
2026 and I'm in
Japan, thousands of
miles away from my
comfort, my couch
and reruns of West
Wing, partnered up
in hotel rooms with
J. Beginning almost
immediately she
big-sisters
me—not new,
and still not
welcome—in
fact she ups the
ante to nagging
mother: cover
your mouth when you
cough flush the
toilet, I don't
ever get to choose
which bed this tour
is the worst
organized it's
too cold in here.
Thermostat’s at 72F.
She has
conservatively twice
the luggage as me
and it is spread out
over every available
surface, including
the bathroom where
she needs a long hot
shower at 5:30 am.
Now we come to the
humming. She cannot
make it stop. She
confesses it’s
been going on two years. Imagine
a five note
leitmotif on an
endless loop. Not
recognizable at
least to me anyway
in the sense that if
you come from a
certain era, you got
quite the songbook
to choose from: you
got Beatles you got
Crosby Stills and
Nash you got Joni
Mitchell and Judy
Collins and Joan
Baez and Bob Dylan.
I mean you got a lot
to choose from;
personally, I could
go back as far as
Neil Sedaka. Even
three notes can be a
respectable Riff.
Beethoven or Mozart,
I'm thinking the
beginning of the
overture to the
Marriage of Figaro.
But it's not any
of that. Unh-uh, no
joy. Just five
repeating notes. I
have hearing aids
that can stream a
podcast directly
from a device, yet
it somehow bleeds
through. The size of
an average hotel
room is of no
consequence, and I
can't hide in
the bathroom.
Imagine no warning
no start no stop no
typical duration
simply omnipresent.
Like water torture.
The days go by quite
nicely; we’re
not joined at the
hip after all. But
then the evenings
and the off-times at
the hotels. The
dreaded itinerary
discussions/complaints/humming.
Two weeks.
Then J is on her way back to the States, still happily hitting reply-all to private WhatsApp tour messages.
Our choir
splinter-group is
off to the
Philippines for a
week of visiting
remote charitible
organizations to
sing and commune,
give them our
donations. The tiny
children before us
gently take your
hand and press it to
their foreheads. The
adults show us the
horrific damage from
the recent
hurricane. The
weather is low
80’s in
contrast to
Japan’s
40’s &
50’s.
***
Sunday has come
around once again;
here I am, feeling
much better, damn
cough almost gone,
weather splendid,
sitting
outside at a
café with my
Knitting buddies. We are an ancient verbal lot
and we all sit relatively politely as we knit, listening to
one another’s fantasies being spun from recent and
distant memories. And as I give a short version of the
Hum Incident, Cindy gives a big sigh. Oh god, she
says, I remember a tour with nine other folks, and it
only took three days until none of us was speaking to the other.
I laugh.
And I bite my tongue to keep from crying.
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