Archive for the ‘memoiry’ Category

forgiveness

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

About the time I was writing my first book, I asked my mom for a picture of herself. She had become a character in my novel and I wanted something to dream on, an idea of her at another part of her life.

What she sent me was amazing: a picture of herself at 23 holding me at less than a year. She was gorgeous – I never think of my mother as gorgeous – and that was only one wild thing about the image.

I was in my mid thirties at the time and I had just started teaching college courses, and I realized that if I had met her on the street or in a classroom, I would have treated her like a child. At 23, she was a child. I wouldn’t have asked her on a date, and I wouldn’t have done anything but try to ease her way through the world. I would have had to stifle the desire – as I often do with my own preciously young students – to call her “sweetheart.” And yet there I was, in her skinny arms, less than a year out of the womb.

This was a really complicated moment, looking at that picture, full of tenderness and forgiveness and just straight up wonder at the way we walk through the world without ever for one second suspecting who we are. Here’s my own mother as a child and there I am, completely in her care. How do you explain something like that?

everything I need to know about relationships with women I learned in two movies

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Everything I need to know about relationships with women is spread out over two movies: The Quiet Man and The Birdcage.

Here’s what The Quiet Man teaches me about women: When you think it’s about money, it’s not about money. And because almost everything that goes on between men and women seems to be about money, this is an important thing to know.

When a wealthy retired boxer played by John Wayne returns to Galway and meets a red-haired force of nature played by Maureen O’Hara, at first he’s amused by her insistence that he secure her dowry in the form of some furniture and cash.

Then things turn sour with her brother – a man-mountain played by Victor McLaglen – Wayne figures, “Let him have the damn money. I’ve got plenty of money.” Big mistake because, as the movie vividly teaches us, when you think it’s about money, it’s not about money. In fact, as this movie demonstrates, it’s about almost everything but the money.

And then there’s The Birdcage. That God hid this information in a movie that features Nathan Lane as a fat transvestite is, well, pretty cool of God. Here’s what The Birdcage teaches me about women: Women are insane, and there’s nothing you can do about that but surrender to it. But if you do surrender to it, they will enrich your life beyond measure.

Robin Williams, who plays Nathan Lane’s “husband” in the film, does one of the most convincing jobs of “manning up” that I’ve ever seen in cinema. At one point, he even does an impression of John Wayne which points out the precise affinity between John Wayne and gay men in Florida. His character entirely capitulates to his spouse even though he knows that “she” is capricious, unreasonable and possibly even certifiable. He admits to her – with some manly regret – that his life without her is not a life, and so there’s no use in even talking about it. She gets what she wants always.

Among the thousand amazing aspects to William’s character’s is that he was earlier married to an actual woman, with whom he had a son. The “real” woman is played by Christine Baranski, and during the movie they reunite for a fun-filled afternoon of nostalgia.

The contrast between Baranski and Lane is stark. Baranksi is reasonable and fun, and Lane is a phenomenal pain in the ass. But then you begin to understand that’s because Baranksi never really was his wife, and Lane is.

Let’s review:

Women are insane, and there’s nothing you can do about that but surrender. But if you do surrender, they will enrich your life beyond measure.

When you think it’s about money, it’s not about money.

an email I sent before the primaries in New York and California and then again before the primary in Indiana

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

Dear Friends,

For weeks now, I’ve been trying to imagine what I can say.

Anyone who has talked to me (or even walked past me) knows my preference. Barack Obama is a politician who can unify our nation by ending our current addiction to polarization; he will not exclude our Republican friends and neighbors from the table. Can you imagine an Obama administration with Richard Lugar as Secretary of State? I’m so ready to put the bitterness behind us and get busy. The America that I believe in does not shy from any challenge. Heroism and peacemaking and innovation belong to all of us.

Let me just say two more things:

1. If you’ve been wondering what you can do for me, on birthdays and Christmas, for the rest of my life, this is it.

2. If you will decide, right now, to vote for Senator Obama, I will put you in the acknowledgements page of my next book. No kidding. This offer does not extend to those who have already been Obama supporters for months or years. Those folks only get my undying gratitude.

My own heart is so full right now. This is the vote we get to tell our grandchildren about. I am so proud of us all. My prayers, almost all of them, are here in Indiana for the next two days.

Love,

Dan Barden

Footnote: only one voter took me up on the acknowledgements promise, but he was a Republican and I will be proud to pay my debt to him.