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Tuesday, May 27, 2014
Sunday, May 25, 2014
"Funeral for Charlie" on Story Shack Magazine
http://thestoryshack.com/short-stories/comedy/funeral-for-charlie/
My humorous short-short "Funeral for Charlie" is now up on Story Shack Magazine, accompanied by a wonderful illustration by artist Daniele Murtas (http://dmurtas.blogspot.com/). Hope you enjoy it!
"I watched as the water swirled away, taking Charlie on one final miraculous journey to the home of his ancient ancestors, to the ocean the abrupt end of his short life had precluded him from ever going to see..."
My humorous short-short "Funeral for Charlie" is now up on Story Shack Magazine, accompanied by a wonderful illustration by artist Daniele Murtas (http://dmurtas.blogspot.com/). Hope you enjoy it!
"I watched as the water swirled away, taking Charlie on one final miraculous journey to the home of his ancient ancestors, to the ocean the abrupt end of his short life had precluded him from ever going to see..."
Monday, May 19, 2014
Out! in That's Life Fast Fiction Quarterly
"Out!" appeared in the Summer 2014 (Australian summer) issue of That's Life Fast Fiction Quarterly. Tell me what you think!
OUT!
“GET OUT!” a girlish voice shouted in exasperation,
unbelievably audible even from across the house, possibly even from across the town.
Squealing boyish laughter followed it; fed on it.
“Get out, I said!! Get out of my
room!!”
Jake laughed again, louder, nearly
giggling with gleeful abandon. “I am out!” he howled back at her triumphantly.
“I’m way out here in the hall!”
I didn’t need to get up to look; I could
visualize the scene from where I sat cringing at the desk in my office. Jake
standing grinning in the hall, gawking at his year-older sister through her
open door, the tips of his sneakers defiantly resting just over the edge of her
lintel.
“Go away!” Katie yelled, her piercing cry
prompting the neighbor’s hounds into a frenzy of agonized howling. “I don’t
like you!”
Jake only cackled harder, his small
fists slapping like drumsticks against the hollow-sounding sheetrock.
“I mean it!! I don’t like you!”
“I don’ wike you eiver!” he hurled back
indistinctly, still chuckling. From the muffled sound of it, probably poking
his tongue out at her.
You’re not supposed to interfere, I reminded
myself forcibly, massaging my temples in a futile attempt to flatten the thick,
bulging veins that had popped out palpably from the sides of my skull. That’s
what the parenting books said; let them fight it out amongst themselves. Easy
for them to say, I grumbled internally. They didn’t have to suffer through the
screeching.
“JAKE!” Katie shrieked suddenly, her
voice rising to a pitch that pained my ears and carved a new crack in my glasses.
“I – don’t – want – you – in – my – room!” she erupted, nearly breathless with childish
fury and indignation. “Get – out!!” Apparently he’d crossed the line in teasing
her; trampled the border between her space and his.
“What?!” he yelled back with mock
innocence. “I’m not doing anything!” I heard rigorous, rhythmic tapping noises
and pictured him performing a slap-happy dance-routine in the hall by her door.
Suddenly there was a loud thunk and a
louder cry, a boyish yell of astonishment and pain.
“Uh-oh, Katie!! You’re gonna be in so
much trouble! I’m telling!”
“Good!” she retorted scathingly, ostensibly
unperturbed by the formidable threat. “I’ll tell what you did, too.”
“I don’t care! Oh no, I don’t! Oh, Mom!
Mo-om!”
I wondered what the parenting
counselors would think if I pretended I didn’t hear it. I wasn’t sure if I
cared.
“Mom!” Jake yelled, bursting into my
office with all of the sound and fury of a string of firecrackers going off unexpectedly
in the middle of May. “Katie threw a shoe at me! Hit me right here on the
head!” He pointed cheerfully at the nasty wound, a small pinkish tint barely
visible beneath my fluorescent lights.
“Looks more like a sandal,” I contended
calmly, bending closer to examine the visible results of the near-fatal blow.
“You don’t seem hurt.”
“But I am!” he expounded happily. “You
should punish her; yes, you should!”
“He started it!” Katie yelled,
exploding in turn through my doorway as if her catapult was parked right
outside. She glared hatefully at her little brother, the hotness of her anger
causing the freshly watered leaves of my poor defenseless office plant to wilt
in dismay.
“No, I didn’t, you did!”
“Yes, you did, you know you did!”
“I know you are, but what am I?!”
“I’m rubber and you’re glue…”
“GET OUT!!” I shouted suddenly,
snatching up my plant and clutching it to my chest as if it were my one true
friend. “Get out of my room!!”
They stopped. Turned to glance thoughtfully
at one other and hushed. Retreated silently from my office, sadly into the
unknown depths of the rest of the house, while I scolded myself over my own childish
temper tantrum.
I can’t lie. I enjoyed the quiet in
spite of myself.
An hour later I tiptoed gingerly into
the empty kitchen, still feeling a little guilty over my impatient outburst and
considering whether I ought to compensate with everyone’s favorite dinner and
maybe ice cream to boot. Through the wide doorway down the hall I could see
them: my two kids lying serenely next to each other on the living room floor, companionably
assembling a five-hundred-piece jigsaw puzzle I’d gotten them for Christmas.
Their argument as long forgotten as Mom’s unusual fit of anger, their renewed
friendship ensured as long as the delicate balance between sibling love and
sibling rivalry was carefully maintained. A balance that might be upset by the
smallest act, the tiniest sound, the most frivolous word, the most meager
interruption to their peaceful co-existence. Maybe they had something there,
after all, those parenting books with their recommendations of
non-interference.
I ducked unnoticed back into my office;
returned to the smooth stillness of my walls and my work, reassured that my
children were safe, my family once again loving and intact. A short time later
my husband came in from the garage, the blissfully quiet haven in which he’d
passed his leisurely afternoon, his work-boots clunking hard against the
laminate flooring as if entirely unconcerned about who heard or observed them.
“We got a while until dinner?” he boomed, thrusting aside the door of my office
with a bang and energetically brushing the dust from his big black mustache
onto my still-quivering houseplant. “I was thinking of patching that hole in
the living room wall,” he continued, staring at me curiously as I leapt from my
rocking, rolling chair, waving my hands incomprehensibly in a frantic effort to
shush him.
“Late dinner tonight,” I whispered,
silencing his half-uttered response with a kiss while I wondered how many minutes or hours the newfound peace might
reign in our little kingdom if only we left our children alone. “But stay out
of their room.”
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Monday, May 12, 2014
How, On Mother’s Day, Twitter Taught Me the True Meaning of Social Support
Yesterday was Mother’s Day. It is not a holiday I
celebrate. I am not a mother myself, and as those of you who know something of
my personal history are aware, my relationship with my own mother was
critically wounded when she became mentally ill during my adolescence.
I’m generally not much affected by the holiday.
It’s been years since I left home, and by now I’ve spent more of my life
without my mom than I spent with her. Time heals. But last year I learned that
she had died – in 2007. And ever since then I’ve found myself thinking of her
much more often, of the mother she was when I was young, and of the mother she
became when I was older. And in completing my memoir, which is being released
next month, naturally I’ve had to spend a great deal of time digging deeper
into my long-repressed feelings towards her, this woman I once loved with all
my heart.
And maybe that’s why, on Sunday morning as I was
doing my usual Twitter thing, I found myself growing uncomfortable when faced with
the steady stream of tweets celebrating moms and motherhood. That’s wonderful,
of course, for people who are mothers and who have mothers – they should
celebrate. But then I thought, what about those who don’t ? What about all
those children – young and old alike – who have lost their mothers? How does it
make them feel to be deluged with these reminders of other people’s happy
families when their own has been torn apart?
I hadn’t known ahead of time what I was going to
tweet that day. I had nothing sweet or tender to offer in honor of the holiday,
nothing warm or fuzzy I wanted to say about my mom or anyone else’s. But as I
waded my way through my tweetstream, it suddenly came to me that even if I
didn’t know what I wanted to say, I knew who I wanted to speak to, this
Mother’s Day. Not to the mothers, but to the motherless.
And this is what I posted.
“For all those who can no longer celebrate
#MothersDay… Remember #Mom.”
And then I got up and made breakfast. When I
returned to my computer about an hour later, my tweet had been retweeted 49
times and favorited 70 times.
I was blown away. Needless to say, nothing I have
ever posted on Twitter has ever gotten anything close to that kind of response.
As of this writing, there have been 133 retweets and 152 favorites – mostly by
people with whom I had no prior connection. And people responded! How they
responded. Here are a few of the notes I received:
"I remember my mom too! Its the 1st Mother's Day without her! Be strong, Lori!"
"I put flowers on my mother's grave too. Miss her so much today."
"Thank you. Lovely reminder of our mothers lost too early."
"Thank you Lori. This is a tough day for a lot of us, but this makes it a little easier."
I was moved. Deeply, deeply moved. My tweet – 70
characters and a photo – had actually reached people, hundreds of them; it had
touched them in a brief yet meaningful way. And when you look at the responses
it prompted, it’s apparent that there were different reasons why. Some wanted
to share their own feelings about their own lost mothers. Some wanted to offer
their support to others who might be in pain. And some were merely grateful to
be acknowledged – to be given the recognition that Mother’s Day is not
necessarily a day of celebration for everyone. The responses varied. But at
heart they all stemmed from the same impulse, our unquenchable desire to communicate
our feelings to other humans.
It’s often said that social media is about making
meaningful connections, about developing relationships with individuals you
wouldn’t normally encounter in your local environment. But there’s a different
kind of connection that social media also makes possible. Connecting to
strangers. People with whom you have no real relationship and probably never
will. People with whom you have absolutely nothing in common, except for this –
a shared emotion. A shared feeling, a shared experience. A shared bit of the
humanity that’s common to us all.
In its own strange way, social media unites us.
We’ve all heard of revolutionary movements being organized through Twitter.
We’re all aware of the grassroots activism that’s transpiring every day on the
internet. We all know how social media is changing our lives, how it’s
connecting people all around the world, how it brings people together, how it
makes their voices heard.
And what we’re discovering is that we are not
alone. There are millions upon millions of others just like us, in all the
countries of the world, who are living and loving and laughing and crying and
hurting and dying. We no longer have to be alone with our feelings. We can
touch, and be touched. We can share our sorrow. We can share our pain. We can
find comfort and support in the hearts of strangers. We can find strength in
the swell of humanity that surrounds us, in the knowledge that in some of the
most essential ways, we are not many, but one.
It’s a powerful age. And a beautiful one. For the
first time in history, we can reach out to our fellow humans, all of them. Knowing
that they can respond to us. Knowing that they will reach back.
Sunday, May 11, 2014
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