Meandering on Match

I wrote the words below the morning before I met Victoria. All speculation.

I didn’t read it again until I opened up my travel computer just before visiting her on December 9. Then I was stunned to realize I had met the same woman as I described here. It was like seeing a prayer before and after it was answered. If I had any doubts about the grace that brought Victoria and I together I no longer had them. When I went to St.Louis the second time I felt Victoria and I were meant for each other.

“a man who also acknowledges that life is a meandering journey bolstered by faith” from a Profile on match.com

I wanted to meet the woman who wrote this.  Match is a place to find every cliche and wishful thinking of single women. You find out how much they like to laugh and be charmed by looks, touches, and thoughtful gestures. You find out they don’t like men who take themselves too seriously, are carrying “baggage,” or want someone to cook for them.

O.K, I get it. We are starting over at age 60 or 70 and want to correct all the mistakes of earlier marriages. We have a short time to redeem the unhappy years of former relationships or exhaustion of the working years.

But even in retirement there must be more than letting ourselves go and breaking every rule we lived by for the first fifty years of our lives. Life has just as much meaning to retired people as to working people, or how could we retire contented? Are we all destined to drink ourselves silly on some beach on our bucket list?

I wanted to meet a person of faith, but there are code words that, too  I am not sure what they mean. I should “love the Lord” or “believe in God” or “attend church.” None of these are sure indicators of faith. Faith is something you live by and alters the way you make decisions. It is not a badge or membership card or an attendance record.  These are the trappings that make some declare they are “spiritual, not religious.” But even that classification is more of a disclaimer than a positive assertion. Not attending church is no more a sign of faith than attending it is.

I like the meandering journey part, because it shows that faith is no guarantee of the future . How could it be faith if it carried guarantees? We pray, we listen and we act as we think is spiritually wise, but we don’t have a path through the Red Sea or even an eye of the needle to walk through. We are seekers our entire life. It is a meandering journey.

Who is this shrewd woman who has come to understand faith in this profound way?And what is she doing on an online dating site? Is she as frustrated as I am trying to find a life partner in the grocery aisles of love? Has she cracked the code of the Profile to find men who see faith as an adventure, not a ticket to heaven? Until I found this meandering woman I had not deciphered the “spiritual, not religious” or “loves the Lord” that labels the believer on her pilgrimage of faith.

It’s all words, so maybe there’s nothing to learn from them until you meet the writer. Still I admire the woman who finds words that fit her and has the faith that some man interpret them as she means them. We are both on a meandering journey, and our paths are about to cross.

Sleepless in Ypsilanti

Teachers call it

Wait time

Thinking lingers on the question

So they wait

 

Mystics call it

The sense of presence

Waiting for God

To fill the silence

 

Parents call it

Respite,

When the echoes have died

Peace returns.

 

Firearms experts call it

Hanging fire

“An unexpected delay in firing,

Which can be several seconds.”

 

When the eventual pause

Comes between us on the phone

I rest on the hinge

Between awkward and anticipation

I want to call it “wait time”

But it feels more like . . . .

“Hanging fire.”

Sixth Month Anniversary

My doubts about match.com

Were pierced in a moment

Looking across the table

At green-eyed blonde sunshine,

By your animated story-telling

Filling my shy silence,

By the sudden expectant pause

As I barely opened my mouth

The startling confession:

“It is nice to be wanted.”

Welcoming love

Before dinner even came to the table.

 

As the salad plates were cleared

Eagerness to listen

Fun-welcoming laughter

Life’s glass half full

Your sudden fierceness

Holding your hand up showing

How joy and pain could fuse in a moment

Your delight in the small coincidences

That piled up before the dessert menu arrived.

 

I was not too dazed to notice

Your slender legs retreating to the rest room

Or the gentle curve of your back 

As we walked back to your car

Or the soft lips I barely touched with mine.

Almost too cautious to be a kiss.

Your so-delighted smile said otherwise.

 

A few hours later I was turning out

Verse as never before.

Our words performed feats of intimacy

For weeks over our 500-mile separation

Until that ferocious hug

You gave me at the airport when I returned.

I could never be close enough after that.

Words, hands, embraces,

Dinner-time, quiet-time, FaceTime

Only fed our teenage addiction

To be together. It would have been

Embarrassing, if it wasn’t so wonderful.

 

Six months ago I had only 

The fierce and tender looks

The parallel lives 

The easy threshold to fun

The glass half full

The delight of hardly-a-kiss

That revealed

By the grace of God

Two meanderers had found each other.

Victoria

From the start you coached me

To look beneath

The teal hat, blown by the wind,

The elegant matching shawl

Donned only for the occasion

The make-up

Betrayed by the reddening eyes,

The smooth face

Trembling with the touch

Of grief and joy.

 

Deeper I saw

Only more light

More sweetness, more willingness

To be known,

So unexpected at the first meeting

When every defense

Rises to the occasion

And couples compose

A flawless first impression.

 

But we were on the clock:

One dinner date

One hack at the façade

Three hours to decide

Our future 500 miles apart

Not so much speed dating

As speed revelation,

Skipping the pleasantries

Of the first, second, and

Third meetings.

 

The first unveiling

Happened in ten minutes.

The emotional dam

Broke before an hour,

Weeping, recovering, apologies

Tremulous admissions

Swept us along till we stood up reluctantly

Too soon out on the street

Walking toward anti-climax.

 

Swimming in disbelief

I pulled you closer for a few steps

As we hurried through the

Night chill toward your car

We parted with a chaste kiss,

Yet even that opened the curtain

Of your smile; my pulse spiked:

The evening had been no delusion.

 

I could not testify in court

What information was exchanged.

Oblivious to details, I even asked

what to call you at the end.

I would have trusted you

With my life, but I wouldn’t

Have known enough

To call you the name

I cannot now stop saying

Victoria.

Sleepless in St. Louis

You are incredible:

A few moments

Doubting the mechanism match.com

Then believing in me

The untested product

spilling out into your life.

 

You sat  down skeptical,

But suddenly vulnerable.

I wanted to leap across the table

Hold you, thank you

For trusting a reckless stranger

Who reached for the dating slot machine

Coming up quadruple apples.

 

Is there a script for first dates?

Where the couple circle around

Confident and qualified

Securing the high ground?

We trashed that script

With shameless grief and joy

Held in one hand.

 

Where did you get the courage?

A careful principled woman

Venturing out on a chill November night

Gambling or believing,

Taking the risk

On the out-of-town stranger.

You are incredible.

We

Never one to shirk the “I” in writing,

Defiance arises in joy

When I blog or lyricize.

Standing up to be noticed in the weeds.

 

Yet on the widow’s walk I found

There was no “I,” no stubborn resolve,

But a twisting, faltering trail.

Was last fork I took  the better one?

 

Should I chart a course for the mountains or

Follow the unpredictable stream, 

Winding away

Along a half-hearted path?

 

Pronouncing “we” bolstered my faith.

Plotting destinations no longer fazed me;

Only the precious present mattered;

A shared journey already was a destination.

 

I am glad to say “We are not certain,”

“Our path is under construction.”

We have become a ruling authority.

Meandering, we seem to know more than we say.

 

My sentences brighten with the first person plural.

Unbridled and confident,

The vocal “I” loves the resonant “we,”

As we-ander in plural anticipation.

Absence

Missed appointments, mismatched socks,

Mislaid house keys, missing chargers,

The proverbial professor will get a pass

For a mind hijacked,

By musings

Of Plato or Kierkegard.

 

Actually

He lost his passport,

Packing for a trip.

His mind recklessly catapulted

Running amok to some unfinished task,

The moment abandoned.

The passport lost.

 

Once the unmoored mind slips away

It is easier to crawl through

A bureaucratic maze,

And replace the passport

Than to salvage the lost moment.

No agency restores time to

Thoughtless borrowers.

 

When I lost you,

Your tiresome family legends,

Your old boyfriend stories

Your quilt quarter display,

Your cataloging of curtains,

Had already slipped

My absent mind:

If only I had been present

To preserve

Them all.

Phone Fancy: For Paula

I drove by the morning she slipped away to college

Her parents and brother stood by

As our sweet summer faded.

Promising to write,

Our resolve was already slipping.

 

She had given me the gift of chatter:

On long nights, never before or since,

I wasted hours on phone banter,

Lost in her sweet girlish twang,

She, happy to lose track of time with me.

 

That morning my fluency went south.

Her best friend would call me, straining to please.

Her flat suburban drawl drifted

Into my fumbling pleasantries

Hastening

The hang-up.

 

Five more years: no romancing the phone.

The wires sparked a little

With chatty Kathy, my wife-to-be.

She filled my awkward silences.

I loved her laugh, her bubbly alto line

But my bass was an artless drone,

My part, riddled with rests.

 

Recalling that summer,

Our mistake was thinking we would write,

When the magic was all in the wires:

Aimless conversation, a miraculous give-and-take

In a perfect key we had stumbled on.

We had mastered both instrument and music.

No wonder phone chatter lost its charm

The morning I lost her to long distance.

Make it Beautiful

Precision has rarely been my goal in life, especially in music.  I hate the haunt of failure. I hate that I learn notes slowly, that I can barely count, that my breath runs out too soon, that my pitch slips, and that I struggle to “audiate” the first pitch.  With challenging music I am relentlessly refining my erratic voice. Others seem to hear what I struggle to hear.  As they sing, I am tuning and counting, haunted by the inexact sound, the elusive cutoff.

I didn’t expect an innocuous  event like “Adult Choir Camp” to revisit these insecurities, but I was wrong. We would not spend the week just learning notes or improving dynamics. We would be making it beautiful by making it precise.

Jerry Blackstone carves words and music like a sculptor– re-shaping words into vowels, flicking away the consonants, shaving off the dipthongs, spreading phonemes across the crevices, and featuring notes as jewels, until every choral voice takes part in making a beautiful sound.

Not perfection, because the perfect is the enemy of the good. “Better,” “Good enough” he says, and often notices effort: “Good cut-off on that ‘D,’ Basses.” The noticing catches me off guard, because I was feverishly complying with directions, forgetting the goal.  Jerry demands a focused intensity to make each sound better to make the whole more beautiful.

In Adult Choir Camp I huddled with the second basses trying to merge and be anonymous. I tuned myself to the vocal scholar who sat next to me; he nailed every entrance and almost every note. I struggled to hear what he heard, combating the impulse to hum the pitch note. I imitated the vowel sounds Jerry modeled for us, wondering if I was making the same sound or the hideous dipthong sound he mocked. Death by a thousand sound deviations.

In writing I am energized by the challenge of precision: the right word, the felt cadence, the imbalance that pushes a composition toward balance. I am better at words than music. In writing my imprecision makes me want to revise. I keep hearing a better phrase.  In singing my imprecision feels more like a flaw, an essential weakness in my character. I am one public note away from being exposed as an imposter.

But music restores me in places writing does not touch. I wake with the music already running through my head, again in a moment of distraction from routine, again walking down the street, again in my sleep, again in the pauses between writing words, music comes unsummoned.  The music that returns unconsciously never labors or echoes my vocal flaws.  It comes soothing, awakening, pleasing, and so I accept the struggle to reproduce it in my conscious life.

Music has taken charge of my grieving, welling up memory and tears and joy. I wander in oblivion much of the week. Then comes a hymn or anthem on Sunday, and my heart overflows. My emotions are held in check most of a day, except for the moment a song sneaks in, and I am free to sorrow or be comforted in my loss. Kathy and I always had music in common and songs we loved together. The music of her funeral revives me over and over again.

My uncle, Glenn, died 33 years ago, but the buoyant grief of the day of  his funeral returns at the prompting of two hymns: “I Am the Bread of Life,” which ends each verse with “I will raise them up on the last day,” and “Seek Ye First” with its cascading alleluias. Their music is forever linked to my uncle. I can not sing those hymns without tears, but I am not sorry, I am grateful for it.

Both Kathy and Glenn planned their funerals in what we sometimes thought morbid detail. They knew what their final message would be, and both services moved their mourners profoundly. But I cannot remember the scriptures or the eulogies, just the music.  The music haunts and stirs me, when so much of memory has been interred.

In the summer repertoire of Adult Choir Camp “Every Night When the Sun Goes Down” brings me to the wavering moment of sorrow/ joy.  “Every night when the sun goes down, I hang my head and mournful cry.”  The music touches the depths of grief. It rakes the embers to cool them.  The relentless cadence of “every night and every night and every night” reminds me I can not escape my hauntings, however I try.

The song reaches past despair. “If you look up quickly, you will see me passing, passing, passing by — on wings of silver . . .”  It summons you to touch the loss and remember, hope, anticipate. Well, it does that for me. Nothing else does that for me.

“Make it beautiful!” Jerry commanded and cajoled and pleaded.   The music would not be beautiful unless we made it so.   We labored over minutiae of the tempo of “every night and every night,” the dynamics of “when I rise,” the present/absent sound of the “l” in “silver,” tiny moments that would make it beautiful. The precision taxed me; it was laborious, almost smothering.

“Remember you’re telling a story,” he said, and that calmed me a little. I knew the song was my story, along with others. Later the song would wake me and let me rest. It would leave and return and grieve and soothe. It would pay me back a hundred times for the week I spent at Interlochen agonizing about “making it beautiful.” I was not only learning the song, the technique, the discipline. I was learning to heal and capture the elusive sound of beautiful, restorative music.