Friday, May 27, 2022

Emperor of Ice Cream


The Emperor of Ice-Cream

BY WALLACE STEVENS

 

Call the roller of big cigars,

The muscular one, and bid him whip

In kitchen cups concupiscent curds.

Let the wenches dawdle in such dress

As they are used to wear, and let the boys

Bring flowers in last month's newspapers.

Let be be finale of seem.

The only emperor is the emperor of ice-cream. 

Take from the dresser of deal,

Lacking the three glass knobs, that sheet

On which she embroidered fantails once

And spread it so as to cover her face.

If her horny feet protrude, they come

To show how cold she is, and dumb.

Let the lamp affix its beam.

The only emperor is the emperor of ice-cream.

 

Wallace Stevens, "The Snowman," "The Emperor of Ice Cream," and "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird" from The Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens. Copyright 1954 by Wallace Stevens. Reprinted with the permission of Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc.

Source: The Collected Poems of Wallace Stevens (1982)


Monday, May 23, 2022

Home Again

 








Thomas Wolfe wrote: You Can’t Go Home Again. You can't truly go back to a place you once lived because so much will have changed since you left. It is not the same place anymore. Memories that live with you (in the present) you share with people and places may forever be a part of you and full of emotions, however.

My brother Dan convinced me to come to an all-school reunion of St. Luke School in the west side Cleveland suburb of Lakewood, Ohio. I attended grades 1-8 at Saint Luke Catholic School. I know it shaped me in many ways into the adult I am today.

Planning for this visit got sweeter and sweeter as the date approached. My birthday on May 20 would feature diner at the Pier W restaurant overlooking Lake Erie with Dan and a very special guest (Janie).  Dan would indulge my art museum obsession with a trip to the Cleveland Museum of Art where they were featuring an exhibition of Alberto Giacometti (1901-1966). I had to find a few of my favorite paintings including Stag at Sharkeys by George Wesley Bellows.

The reunion kicked off with a 4:30 Mass at St. Luke followed by an all class reunion in the gym next door. No surprise, classmates from Catholic families often had a sibling present or accounted for as an update force multiplier. Sheila couldn't be here but her sister wanted to make sure to say hello. John was going to fly in from California but he tested positive with Covid-19. He’s fine, reports his brother Danny. Carol still has those electric blue eyes and becomes a magnet for our 8th grade graduation class of 1970. Greg was on Face Time on the cell phone of which Wes scanned to gym. You missed Mary but her brother Jack is right over there. And Mary Sue (Soupy) had to leave early to tend to her mom. Brennan’s Catered the event and there was ample access to the open bar. It took a few minutes and some microphone adjusting to read the numbers of the winning raffle tickets. The silent auction featured some bargains ranging from a big screen TV to a wine gift basket from Rosie's Wine House.












Dan can’t resist the family tradition of being tour guide that helps you understand where the Detroit theater “used to be” and what new restaurants are worth trying. A wave to the guard house at the Cleveland Yacht Club “turn around” and a lovely drive through the valley metro-park system where picnic spots abound and where there are three municipal golf course options.

It hasn’t been home since my parents sold the house I grew up in on Edgewater Drive in 1985. But the warmth and vitality of  Cleveland (The Land) prevails and prospers. Lake Erie and the Cleveland skyline views from the Winton Place and Pier W are just what the doctor ordered as I wallow in reflection and consider Robert Frost words…I took the one less traveled by, And that has made all the difference.




I









Friday, May 20, 2022

Be Water

 









“Don’t get set into one form, adapt it and build your own, and let it grow, be like water. Empty your mind, be formless, shapeless — like water. Now you put water in a cup, it becomes the cup; You put water into a bottle it becomes the bottle; You put it in a teapot it becomes the teapot. Now water can flow or it can crash. Be water, my friend.” – Bruce Lee 

I was honored to be asked to speak to a group based in Tampa, Florida called Career Rebound. Okay, honored (as I am) my brother is an active leader and member of this group. As speaker, my brother wanted to know how I was able to rebound so effectively in my career journey. Notably, how I managed to work for 12 top flight advertising agencies. He gives me a lot of credit and that is a wonderful thing about people around you. It is easy to take for granted the remarkable support you have among family, friends and associates. There are no words to fully express what it means (sometimes even when it is too late).

So I started building a PowerPoint presentation that will satisfy this virtual speaking engagement. Suddenly I realize that indeed my career has taken quite a few turns.  In retrospect, I focus on the high points and the achievements. However, I am fully aware of sadness and disappointment too. I consider myself very lucky. I consider myself blessed even. They say that God has a plan. But (he/she/they)  demonstrates no obligation to share that plan with me.

I grew up attending a Catholic School (Grades 1-8). The nuns reinforced the notion that there is a sort of reckoning after this life on Earth. I hope so. I am really counting on being with so many wonderful folks who were so important and influential in my life.

 “Mathew, Mark, Luke and John; bless this bed I lie upon. If I should die before I wake, I pray dear Lord my soul to take.”  This bedtime prayer was sort of routine growing up. Now, I’m hoping those saints have the clout I’m gonna need in the afterlife.

But I digress. I consider myself a certifiable rebounder. My life and career has included great heights (full of joy and celebration) and great lows (full of sadness, regret and setbacks). Still, I am inspired by a sense of Mindfulness, I try to live in the moment. I am water.


Images: The Great Wave off Kanagawa by Katsushika Hokusai (above) and iPhone image of my shadow inside a James Turell installation in Saint Louis Spring 2021 

Credits: Special Thanks to Greg Morgan and Wendy Leigh of Career Rebound. 

And, Oh yeah it's my birthday and I'm feeling a bit reflective. 

Thursday, May 12, 2022

Lindsey's Sweet Eulogy

 









When I close my eyes and think about my mom I see her sitting outside our house in St. Louis, sunglasses on, hair held back by a bandanna, eyes closed and face toward the sun.

I close them again and I see her standing on the tennis courts at Raleigh Racquet Club, racquet bag on her shoulder, chains around her neck catching the glimmer of the sun.

Just one more time I close my eyes, perhaps a glutton attempting to recall a long-forgotten story or memory, and I see her hands filled with tomatoes or peppers, maybe even raspberries after a quick trip to the garden to asses the growth, harvesting products of a partnership between the earth, the rain and the sun.

The images are fairly consistent. My mom was pretty consistent. She was consistent in her day, waking before the sun, working, grocery shopping, home in time for General Hospital and to prepare a bite for dinner before turning in, often times before we were even home from work. She was consistent in her styling, when she and my dad met, tennis whites day and night and as her focus shifted to raising us, always function over fashion, tshirts and hoodies, leggings and headbands, sweaters or a sheer overlay if the occasion arose. She was consistent in sharing her love, verbally with a “love you schnuckie” or on social media with a big red heart or the words “my whole heart,” mailed baked goods and tchotchkes carefully wrapped and sometimes a new bill or two from “her friend at the bank” addressed to the littlest loves who completely stole her heart.

Beyond what I can see when I close my eyes and what we all could expect—my mom could be heard (without fail) before she entered a room, a home, heck—the beach club. When she had an opinion, it was known—she often spoke before she thought—and as the equally stubborn daughter of a fiercely opinionated mother, not only was I on the receiving end of countless unfiltered comments, I was the beneficiary of her advocacy more times than I could count. I’m sure we all have a story, mine happens to have been in the Kleinfeld’s Bridal Salon—when I came out in a gorgeous lace dress and her first comment was “uch, you’re not going to get married in that...” In the moment, I was crushed, but looking back, I now know she was leading with her heart, it just took me until I was a mom myself to understand this unbridled desire to do or say anything that (in her eyes) was to protect her kids. My mom taught me how to use my voice, how to direct my voice and while most of the time our opinions were not in alignment—I find so much comfort in understanding now that her intent was never intended to hurt, she was always looking out for our best interest.

My mom lived her life to make the lives of others easier. Nothing she ever did was solely for her own benefit. It didn’t matter how many times we encouraged her to do for herself, making time even for a haircut or a night out took a back seat to cheering at Ben’s football games or baking for a loved ones birthday, holiday or celebration. She was well into her 50s before I remember her ever getting her nails done. Her mind held an almost encyclopedic catalog of events. It was rare anything slipped though a crack—and if it did, she was certain to over-correct to prevent any such lapse in care. I remember one such morning, my sophomore year in college…I was in Charlotte, North Carolina and a frantic call from Dad in St. Louis (a call I would not have been awake for—had there not been an hour time change) stating Ben was ready to go to school…but mom had forgotten to pack his lunch. In my revisionist history, packing Ben’s lunch was not an overly complex task—a bagel with cream cheese, peanut butter crackers, pringles, a string cheese, maybe some fruit snacks? But, alas, she hadn’t packed it the night before and there dad was scrambling in the kitchen to get something in a brown bag. The next morning…and for many mornings to come…there was not one brown bag on the top shelf of the fridge, but two…one behind the other, just to make sure school lunch was never a reality.

These truths didn’t just extend to her family—for someone so stubbornly convinced that St. Louis would never be home, she collected loyal friends and fans, people who would go out of their way and pass 4 other coffee shops to grab their drink from Lynn, who’d have already started their “usual” as their car pulled in to the parking lot. My mom wasn’t just our biggest fan, she became our friends biggest fans too. In the stands her voice did just cheer for us, she cheered for all of our friends. On Friday nights, she wasn’t just worried about us, she was worried about all of our friends. As we aged that cheering turned to asking about our friends jobs and families and ‘Mama Mo’ genuinely wanted to know. There were so many instances of these acts, but just This week, a friend shared a memory I hadn’t before known. One of my former “kids,” a young adult she had met maybe once or twice before, was on a weeks-long bus tour with a performance group…on their stop in St. Louis (a show my dad attended, but I believe was past Lynn’s bedtime) my mom navigated their theater location, found their bus and delivered fresh baked goods to these guys weeks into their tour and with many weeks to go before returning to their own moms and home cooked sweets. It’s just who she was—if it was important to us, it became important to her.

My parents love was not the simple and easy kind of love. It was the hard and genuine love, the love worth working for—because the love always outweighed the hard. Ben and I are so incredibly lucky to have learned this truth of about love—that when it really matters, it is worth working for. Growing up, there was a copy of The Night Before Christmas in our home, a simple and careful inscription reading something to the effect “Wes, one day your children will enjoy this more than mine will. Always, Lynn” 42 years later, not only have their children enjoyed that book together—but their grandchildren will learn from the careful and intentional balance and partnership we should all be lucky to have in our lives. As Lawton asked just a few nights ago, “Mommy, how long are we going to be sad?” I could onlyI reply honestly—we’re going to be sad for a while…and we are also going to be really, really happy. It’s okay to hold those truths concurrently and mom would want the moments of joy, at scoring a soccer goal, tasting a banana chocolate chip muffin or hearing just the right song on the radio to make us smile. We are all going to miss getting Grandma’s treats in the mail…but when we try our very best to recreate that recipe, make the matzah ball soup, or write a letter every SINGLE day to sleep away camp, we know it will hold her spirit and continue to bring soothing to this still-fresh shock and sustained comfort as we all continue to grow. May THIS be Gods will.

It isn't possible to upstage Grandma Toby on such occassions but Lindsey really delivered this eulogy with grace and style. The photo above is of of the Morgan support team who showed up in Ocean, NJ for Lynn's funeral. (clockwise from left: Matt Morgan, Wesley A Morgan, Chris Dewey, Rob Morgan, Greg Morgan, Wes Morgan, Allison, Ben and Yadi around the remarkable Lindsey)