The Edge of Whelmed
  • Edge of Whelmed

Boston Marathon A Year Later

4/21/2014

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It's Marathon Day in Boston.   Himself and I and a group of running friends monitored the course for the 5K on Saturday, and also for the "Tribute Run" which followed.  Survivors of the bombing ran or walked, were carried or wheeled around a large block near the Finish Line in Copley Square.  It was eerie to be so close to them and to the sight of the tragedy on such a beautiful, sunny, uneventful day.  Family members and friends also participated.  Some ran, and many were too overcome to do much more than cry.  The older brother of Martin Richards ran in the kids' race, intense and determined with a sadder face than any little boy should have to wear.

But today is the big day.  Himself isn't running this year, although he is taking the day off since Marathon Monday is a high holy day in the Church of the Fleet Footed.  It should be an entirely joyful day, with wishes for "good luck" flying through the air on Face Book and high fives along the route from those cheering them on, but I'm not sure it will ever be just that again.  Last year's cloud hangs heavy over Boston today.  Our vulnerability is hanging out in the open for all to see, our mortality too noisy to be ignored.  Everyone has a story.  Everyone was there or almost there or knows someone who was there.  We all know someone who was hurt by this.  I discovered that the sister of one of the victims works in my office.  But on this beautiful spring day which still feels full of hope, thirty-six thousand runners will do what I've never been able to wrap my mind around.  They will run twenty-six point two miles (and may God help you if you leave out that "point two" because I'm told that's the hardest half of the race).  Some do it for fun.  Some do it for health.  Some do it to prove they can.  This year many do it in defiance of death.  The thing is, you can't defy death.  It's going to win every time.  But I think if anything positive has come out of last year's unthinkable sadness it is that some people pay more attention to life, knowing that it could be snatched away from them or someone they love in the blinking of an eye.  Boston pride has never been stronger and Boston hearts have never been more ambivalent.  We certainly didn't choose to be the center of all this sad attention, but here we are.  That's pretty much how life works.  You do what needs doing and you move on.

My hope for today is joy and excitement among the marathoners, with a minimum amount of work for the medical volunteers to cope with.  I hope for sunshine and PRs for everyone (that's "personal record" for the uninitiated).  Enjoy the cheers and the beers.  Most of all I hope for peace and for closure (such as it is or could ever be) because we as a city and a nation need to heal and get on with this very fleeting business of life.



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Face Book Faux Pas

4/13/2014

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It's happened again.  I made a political statement on Face Book that expressed my displeasure with every single Republican voting against equal wages for women.  The firestorm has begun.

Why can't I content myself to see pictures of cute kitty cats, or the eight-hundreth four year old singing her version of Disney's "Let It Go"?  I could take a picture of my dinner or find out which character I am from "The Wizard of Oz".  I could even take a "selfie" once I learn how to use my new phone.  Why the hell did I have to let the world know I'm a liberal Democrat?  I even had the nerve to say in the (nasty) conversation that followed that I liked President Obama.  Oh boy.

Feeling obliged to check in and totally castigate me are former friends from decades ago, family members, and people I don't even know.  Why am I not allowed to have my own opinion?  They seem quite vocal about theirs.  And I can't be the only one who thinks this way because, hey, he DID get elected.  All of this is beside the point.  I should know better by now.  People prowl the pages of the internet looking for something to pounce on.  You can sense the hand-rubbing, eye-sparking glee when someone stupid (like me) falls into their trap.  They don't call it "the web" for nothing.  I am the fly and they are the spiders and they're having a ball. 

Well, my vote cancels one of their votes.  That's some comfort.  But I think I'll stick to pictures of kitties for a while until they all calm down.

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In Praise of the Lowly Crocus

4/11/2014

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After the winter that made me wonder if my husband had secretly moved us to Greenland during the night, it was lovely to see the crocuses blooming here and there on the lawn of the Federal Reserve Bank in Boston on the Summer Street side, across the street from South Station.  They aren't in big, dramatic clumps.  They are lightly scattered and most people walk by without noticing them, but they are really delightful.  Last week all the flowers were yellow, which I'm beginning to think is some "crocus hierarchy" thing, since they come up first on my lawn, too.  This week we have purple, and a few scattered white (with a hint of purple stripes).  They are as cute as anything and I'm liking them a lot.

Here amid the concrete and steel of the Fed, surrounded by  metal posts set into the sidewalk to keep trucks from driving through the windows and grabbing the money (I guess...although someone could just have really lousy taste in statuary) are these humble little patches of color, like tufts on a hand-stitched quilt.

I make a point of checking on their progress every day since I feel that anything that grows downtown needs encouragement.  I try not to talk to them aloud (people don't understand) but I do smile at them every single time I pass them.  They won't last long.  They never do.  But while they are here I intend to enjoy them.

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Out of hibernation

4/5/2014

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It's been a while since I've posted because I'm working full time these days in downtown Boston.   The commute is a little weird....people tied up in their technology, and sometimes offering me a seat because of my gray hair.  I always take it, of course.  One wants to encourage that sort of behavior.  Fifteen years is a long time, and I do find it takes longer than it used to getting myself out the door, but it's rather nice having a place to go and a reason to get dressed in the morning.
And as I've remarked before, that trek over the Fort Point Channel has been NASTY on some of the colder days.

But now that winter's back is broken and the crocuses are up on my front lawn, there are stirrings of life within me, and my bleak mood is starting to lift.  I've even started running again and in a moment of insanity signed up for a five mile race in May.  My goal is to finish it without looking up into the face of an EMT giving me oxygen or a priest giving me Last Rites.
 

Meanwhile, what started as putting away a few winter things turned into dragging out the silk flowers and bedecking the house with fake jonquils and forsythia.  The fleeces are headed to their summer grave in the attic and the boots won't be far behind.  I get to re-discover which clothes I saved from last year and which ones still fit me.  The joys of a bad memory, I will be surprised by at least a third of what I find.  It's like retail therapy only cheaper.

My birds are back, the days are getting longer, and I'm THIS close to opening a window.   April.  Bring it!

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    Author

    The author, a voice over actor who became a mother for the first time at age 40 and has been winging it ever since, attempts to share her views on the world, mostly to help her figure it out for herself.  What the heck?  It's cheaper than therapy.

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