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My Grandmother 1916-2009

I would rush in, squeal “Pattiiiiiiiii!” and give her tiny body a bone-crushing hug.  She’d break into a wide smile, straighten her nine yards of sari and say, “Little Maitri, you’re just the same.  When I look at your face, it’s like looking at you when you were five years old.  Even your mannerisms haven’t changed.”  That was our routine for thirty four years.  And that is how I will always remember my grandmother, my Patti.

At 10pm on Sunday, after a visit during which she didn’t open her eyes once while struggling to breathe through her mouth, I held her hand and said quietly in Tamil, “You are my favorite grandmother.  Forget that, you are the only grandparent I have truly known.  Right now, I don’t feel frustration at your pain and your insistence on living like this.  I feel nothing but love for you.”  With that, I smiled, kissed her hand and her right cheek and left for my home.  Less than two hours later, not minutes after my head hit the pillow, my brother called with the news that Patti had passed away, surrounded by my mother, father, uncle, aunt and a nurse.   I remember now my last coherent thought before hearing the news: “This is no way for such a great woman to live.  Please let her not suffer like this any longer.”

Regal, elegant Patti.  Even in death.  While my uncle and father informed family and friends and funeral arrangements began, my mother and I cleaned and dressed Patti in a green sari, her favorite color, and prepared her for family who would arrive starting at sunrise.  Predestination is not my philosophy of choice, but as I arranged the folds of the sari on her lithe, sleeping frame, it all made sense.  This is why I moved back to Ohio.  This is why I wasn’t away on business.  Just for this very moment.

Ninety three years is a long time to live.  In that time, she raised eight successful, idiosyncratic children and was there for their children, her sixteen grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.  As my mother said last night, Patti made each one of us feel special, as if we were her favorite and no one else.   And not just members of the immediate family.  She saw the good in every single person she interacted with and would only remember them fondly.  This is probably why 300 people showed up at the visitation yesterday although her obituary did not appear in the paper until today.  Desi, not desi, Hindu, not Hindu, young, old, they were all there.

There are scores of amazing things Patti did in her life.  She taught herself English at a young age in the heart of South India, drew masterpieces in color theory with no formal training and created museum-worthy dioramas, miniatures and costumes from common household goods.  Small yet quick and resourceful, she managed a large joint household consisting of her own brood and in-laws and, as I found out only last night, saved one of her sons and my brother from drowning (in the same temple tank but decades apart, oddly enough).  The most telling, however, was her modernity.  At a time when good Tam-Brahm South Indian wives were supposed to keep their children on conservative life paths, she allowed her sons to cross the seven seas, encouraged all four of her daughters to get college educations and eventually let every single one of her children leave the nest to make their own homes in unknown lands like North India, Kuwait and the United States.

She retained this progressive world view well into her old age.  I dare anyone to find me a vegetarian, Orthodox-Hindu nanogenerian who was more accepting of the western-ness of her grandchildren than their parents, watched MTV with these kids, listened to their school and college stories, marveled at their non-traditional ways and welcomed her granddaughter’s non-Hindu-Indian husband into her family with open arms (to the point where I was chopped liver when D was in the room, but that’s neither here nor there).  Point out to me an Old World grandmother who had her granddaughter teach her the fundamentals of geology and computer visualization so she could understand that granddaughter’s graduate theses.  Find me a Tamil-speaking, nine-yards-sari-wearing bubbeh who flew from Kuwait to New York City accompanied only by two Arabic-speaking youngsters and communicated with them.  While others feared experience and change, Patti viewed life as an adventure, ready before everyone to go forth and explore.  There was nothing she could not do, there was nothing she kept us from doing.  If our family has strong, efficient women who do even when men tell us not to, it is because of her.

Patti lives in us now.  For the last two days, I did what I do best at times like this – make lists and take charge.  I dressed Patti with my mother, made sure her sari was always just right, followed her to the hearse with my father and uncle, wrote her obituary with my uncle and sent it off to the local paper, got her stuff together, drove my mother and aunts (my other mothers) to the funeral home where we changed her into a beautiful royal-blue sari, wrote her eulogy with kind edits from my brother, delivered it at her service and was the only woman who stood next to her until the incinerator took her at 5pm yesterday.  She would have done the same and expected nothing less of me.  I see this quality in my baby niece, who patiently accompanied us all day yesterday, holding, hugging and consoling when my mother, sister-in-law or I broke down and observing with tears and strength as Patti was prepared for the fire.  She is the rock of the next generation.

It’s sinking in today, now that I’m back at my desk and not going, going, going.  I don’t know what is worse – that my mother lost her mother or the world lost a treasure.  But, I am fully certain that she lived a long, full life, not one of us had any interest in wanting her to stay alive only to suffer and it was her time to go.  Patti, for you to whom all of us have gone to for comfort, we know that you are now in eternal comfort.  I love you and miss you. Thank you for being my grandmother.

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Dear New Orleans,
I can’t give you anything but love, baby. That’s the one thing I have plenty of, my baby.
Kisses,
Maitri

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Day 1304: And Then It Hit Me

Clay left a very perceptive comment on my last post: “Wow, man, watching that episode the same week or so you leave New Orleans.  Heavy.  How are you keeping it together?”  Barely, Clay, barely.

My childhood journal-keeping and this blog started to sort my rushing thoughts by writing about them and then making lists.  So, it’s no surprise that my mantra for this already-busy 2009 is “Breathe, make a plan, execute.” Here goes.

I am leaving my friends, life, and job in New Orleans for my family, new job and new friends (?) up north.  This wasn’t real, it was all happening to someone else whom I answered for … until the anxiety dream set in last night after a long, strenuous evening of packing boxes.  You know, the one in which you wake up, show up to your new workplace on the first day, everyone stares at you because you aren’t wearing a stitch of clothing but for the navel fuzz and you’re two hours late?  Yeah, that one.  Great, I can’t shake off this type of dream for days.

The anxiety is a very low-frequency, high-amplitude wave.  It comes rarely, but when it’s here, watch out!  Only understandable given how much is going on all at once, right? Leaving here means saying goodbye to friends, wrapping up work projects, and handing them over to the right people at the right time, wrapping up Krewe du Vieux work and handing that over to the right people at the right time, going to forward mail and realizing we don’t yet have a mailing address up there, PACKING like mad people and setting stuff aside for Bridge House (parting with things lovingly stored is such sweet sorrow, even if you didn’t look at one of them sideways once in the last five years) and the paperwork and apprehension a new job, in R&D management, entails.

No, no, don’t cry me a river.  I have been swimming in nothing but responsibility galore over the last few years, this is only the next adult step.  Yet, step back a little and consider how much material, paperwork, and duress modern living entails.  Take one more step back and see what a strange bookend this move is to seven lovely, frightening, strange years in the city of New Orleans, as mythical and fraught with peril as Atlantis to the rest of this country.  We’re moving back to America, folks, and my dueling senses of culture and civilization quiver in equal parts terror and joy.

There is a profound physical toll, too.  While I start work anew on Monday, we have a lot of flying and driving to do, temporary boxes to unpack at various locations, ok let me stop right there before I freak out.  Following that, whenever we manage to close on a house (and don’t get me started on banks’ mortgage lending practices in this economy, the wankers!), there’s returning back to New Orleans, the loading of all of our stuff into a moving truck (hoping that everything has made it up there in one piece) and then flies back to Florida for work.  Meanwhile, most days, I shuttle my stuff and an overnight bag between the homes of my parents and various relatives, hoping that one day I will have a place to call my own which isn’t located in Mom & Dad’s guest room.  Fifteen years after leaving the homestead for FREEDOM!, the prodigal daughter returns.  With fifteen years worth of crap in a truck to show for it.

Alternating between the front and back burner of this hot moving stove is work, my career, what I provide to earn a paycheck.  Leaving a relatively safe job in the Energy industry – one that I trained for and have made great strides in, at a company that rewards its employees handsomely for performance and where I have made a ton of friends, on a team with colleagues a corporate cog can only dream of – is hard.  Starting over at the base of another learning curve, despite that I went to school for this as well, is daunting.  At work or at play, I’ve never needed a book to tell me how to win friends and influence people, but I will be the new kid on the block once again.  It does make you wonder where your roots are.

With all of this, I have to remember to have no expectations.  To go in with an open mind and give everyone and everything a chance, just as I ask them to do for me.  Already, folks up there are asking after my costumes and New Orleans cooking, so we’re going to have to host a “gumbo party” (still can’t keep myself from laughing out loud every time I say that phrase) real soon.  And, through it all, my friends who gently propel me forward with “I hope those Yankees appreciate what they’re gaining,” “No one I know who left the oil industry regrets it,” “Enjoy your move back north … happy quality of life,” “Deep breath” and “Want me to come give you a real hug?”  The world tells me that this, too, will pass.  Maybe.

I feel a little better now.  Thanks for letting me talk about it.

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Day 1301: Battlestar Galactica is Gone

Battlestar Galactica has achieved its momentarily cheesy, then bittersweet, and then uplifting ending.  There is only one soaked kleenex box at my side and all of the characters are where they should be. So, I don’t feel as utterly bereft as when Babylon 5 ended in 1998, but very very close.

Gaius Baltar finally grew a pair and gave us the answer:  “I see angels … Dreams given to a chosen few … whether we want to call it God or Gods … it doesn’t matter.  It’s here.  It exists.  God is a force of nature, beyond good or evil.  We created good and evil.”  So did that harbinger of death who lead them to their end after all, Kara Thrace:

… the people who were standing beside you when you became who you are, when Ron Moore’s God wants to get a message past the firing line, that’s who He sends.

He sends Starbuck Leoben, the first person who ever knew about her mother. He sends Kara her father, too, angels to angels, gods speaking with gods. He sends Gaius the first person who ever showed him completely unselfish kindness. He sends Caprica the first person who showed her love. He sends the men and women of the fleet, he sends Lee and Bill, the girl who walked between the stars and cheated death a thousand times. He sends them an angel. He sends them Kara Thrace to show them the way home.

Angels whom you can hug, talk to, kiss, punch. Angels who hold guns and shoot. Angels who don’t know who or what they are. In other words, angels I can deal with.

All of this has happened before, and all of it will happen again.” Funny that Edward James Olmos takes us all the way from Bladerunner to Battlestar Galactica.  Both movies warn humanity of the same thing: our hubris. While discussing the trailer of the new Terminator movie (and years ago after watching The Matrix and A.I.), I asked a fellow scientist if Armageddon is inevitable despite our best efforts to avoid it. If it is in our nature to explore, discover, and push our boundaries, are we not going to tinker with the nature of being and have that hurt us?  If this is Ron Moore’s God’s way of telling us to back away from the Aibos and Ursulas of the world lest they some day take us over (and eventually humiliate themselves by wearing red plastic sashes to fight alongside us), we must first kill our desire to make and prolong life however we can.  We must do away with our unrelenting need for rebirth, freedom from death and everlasting life, for Resurrection.  There doesn’t have to be some kind of way out of here.

Humans are what we are, however.  It is in our nature to explore, create, attempt to dominate, and fuck up.  To get away from our limitations, our confusions, to get relief, to botch it all, to rebuild.  Therefore, everything we do will ultimately end in ruin and we start over and do it again. It’s the way of our inner beast.  (Or, at least, our inner Japanese beast.  For the love of humanity, what’s going on in The Land Of The Rising Android?)

Make us stop. Just try and make us. As long as we are humans, an Armageddon of our own doing is inevitable and not unexpected. This and love, that wonderful aid and antidote to total destruction, are what we are here on earth to learn.

A few programming notes:
– The Cylon centurions rocked the house! I feel bad for the “toasters” on both sides, treated like mere collateral damage. They’re machines, but are they?
– When Africa’s outline and the early Homo sapiens tribe popped onscreen, I totally called the whole “Out Of Africa”-“Hera as Mitochondrial Eve” thing. East Africa? Hera? Duh? Also, earlier on in the season, I opined that it would turn out that all modern humans are descended from Cylons.
– Roslin’s last flight tore me up inside.  After rewatching that scene just now, my contact lenses are in my tear-soaked palms.  Oh, break my heart, Galactica.
– So, if God doesn’t like to be known by that name, would he rather be called Jimi Hendrix?  Jimi Hendrix thought he was god.

We’re powerful, creative, resilient, beautiful creatures that were meant to pass into the night, but we refuse to realize this simple truth about ourselves. All of this has happened before, and all of it will happen again. I wouldn’t have it any other way.

So say we all.

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My new favorite blog is Futility Closet because they post clever and useless-but-to-me tidbits like this.

“Place a glass of wine upon a table, put a hat over it, and offer to lay a wager with any of the company that you will empty the glass without lifting the hat. When your proposition is accepted, desire the company not to touch the hat; and then get under the table, and commence making a sucking noise, smacking your lips at intervals, as though you were swallowing the wine with infinite satisfaction to yourself. After a minute or two, come from under the table, and address the person who took your wager with, ‘Now, sir.’ His curiosity being, of course, excited, he will lift up the hat, in order to see whether you have really performed what you promised; and the instant he does so, take up the glass, and after having swallowed its contents, say, ‘You have lost, sir, for you see I have drunk the wine without raising up the hat.'”
Samuel Williams, The Boy’s Treasury of Sports, Pastimes, and Recreations, 1847

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