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December 14th 2006. everything was fine yesterday >

morn.jpg

Everything was fine yesterday. Awake at three and a half AM-- sipping the tea in silence, only the occasional flapping of lips around the hot suckled mix of air and dirty waters.
I put myself at work at the green table in front of the window in the dining room (which is also the other room)-- the hour is acceptable, the city asleep in the finally-cold darkness never dark of it. My favorite hour-- when the street washers are going back, the orange turret flashing lights singing hi-ho.
Morning arrives, the sky's odd and unexpected and the chemtrails bright and inclined as if hand printed in the sky. Chimneys are billowing smoke into the exhausted city's lungs-- people appear and disappear at the chilly windowsills. I write and draw and listen to music and everything is fine.

Later I receive four marvelous pairs of socks for my birthday, all stripes, and a compass and a small vase of arbutus wood where to keep the erasers and the sharpener in (I scheme).
It is my birthday but it feel fine, although I expected to feel depressed and lonely --as this usually happens on the occasion.
Later my productive mood isn't fading, my mother calls (she needs help with the PC but surprisingly remembers the occasion) and anything I want to use seems to be at reach.

Then my sister calls, we talk about a number of things-- like she buying a house, and me reassuring her it is a good idea to buy twenty miles from Rome-- "you'll be in the woods!".
Then I ask about our Christmas reunion.
The Christmas reunion is something that nobody wants really to do except my father, who expects from it I don't know what-- the digest from our separated lives --of which he knows nothing about and at which he looks with a deformed lens, like we were the people we were years ago or never was. As a result, the reunion regularly turns into a series of clumsy efforts to be sincere-- followed by an equal number of efforts to hide the truth and avoid pointless criticism. Unwelcomed hypocrisy like a plumber in the house-- all sounds sounding fake.

--sister: "I talked with our father and he said that, since you never called him this year, there won't be any Christmas reunion this time. So I booked to go away with my boyfriend that week and we--"
--me: "What? Wait a fucking minute."

Shit. Sure I hadn't heard from my father since when I last called him on his birthday, last February. And everybody knows our relationship is fucked up. And sure, I didn't think very sympathetically of him lately. And notoriously he never calls or shows interest whatsoever but always expects me to look for him --acting like he is forgotten and misunderstood big time.
And yes I haven't looked for him lately -although that would be the simplest solution- because every time I hear from him or spend time with him I feel like shit for days. But these are no reasons to bury me under the guilt of screwing his only day of the year.

I tried to explain in the past.
--me (years ago): 'it's not that I have something against you. It's that being with you is something I don't usually have the energies and the optimism or the indifferent superficiality to do.
--father (years ago): I see, I see.

Oh, father. What does he do with what you give him, be it tears, hugs, self-criticism or good will? He puts it in his big pocket -- it is a dime squeezed from life --and do nothing else about it. His major drive in life --desperation for love which in his book has nothing to do with giving something in return. This can be bearable sometimes but these last years evidently wasn't.

--me: "Thanks a lot sis. Couldn't you patch things up instead of instantly taking the occasion to jump the reunion without feeling guilty?"
--sister: "I guess I didn't think about it. Anyway it's too late because I booked."
--me: "...couldn't you say something like, 'Corpodibacco never even dreamed of jumping Christmas, even if you two didn't call each other I am certain he'd be surprised...' Couldn't you? uhu?"

It is too late. Words are hollow. After a while I am almost hysterical and desperate. That's my sister. Dozens of time I interceded with my mother or father to save her ass and she hasn't the slightest instinct of solidarity.
But I know it's not her fault-- That's how my father brought us up. One against the other. Everyone in the family-- his wife included-- eager to turn the others in for a bit of father's respect, which after all is a typical Italian family outcome, although ours was more violent or exposed.

--me: now all I should do, all he left me with, is to supposedly call him to humbly apologize for the turning out of things and swearing it wasn't my intention-- that his sacred reunion-- it shouldn't be touched-- something like this. Only I can't do it and besides it is useless, 'cause you won't be there. Thanks a lot.
--sister: He's an old man. You just should be more normal with him.

Just an old man. That's typical.

--me (mad): what, are you prizing on the sense of guilt my father just set up for me to fall into? Besides not all old men are innocent and harmless simply because they're old, sister. They are just persons and they can be disloyal and dangerous like anyone else.

When I hang up, suddenly I have a bleak day in front of me. In that moment I actually feel the positive energy getting drained out of my hands-- I sit at the table and do nothing but cursing and breaking the lead pencil tip and then I get out --knowing I will spend the rest of the day hoping in vain from a call or an email or fucking anything from my father-- which naturally won't come. I love my new socks and I wish birthdays didn't exist.



December 13th 2005. letter to a friend, on corpodibacco's birthday >

tench'iu fella,

bat'de scai is grei end blu tudei,
mi biing older nau

tudei aiem no'teppi bud,

cos de scai is mor grei
end les blu

ai no, is stupid
forghiv mi bicos ai uanta bi
iongher, so iang enaf,

to bi pischèl1 foreve,
uic'is not dat fan ider.

(Don't worry if you don't get it. It's just a macaronic thing dedicated to those out there who do not enjoy that we write in english being italian. And to ourselves. And to all of you unlucky enough to know)

1. pischèl, pischello: naive youngster


browsing tag: birthday
 
 
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