Saturday, February 18, 2023

Notes from the week

 


Our friends Lisa and Ozier brought us those lovely tulips last Sunday when they came over to watch the Super Bowl with us. We all enjoyed Rihanna's half time show in the sky, her swollen belly front and center, setting off a flurry of coast to coast texting: Is she pregnant again? She definitely looks pregnant. And so she is. More power to her and hers. All day Monday I kept photographing my tulips as the light played across them through my kitchen window. The colors were so delicate as the buds opened and bowed their lovely heads. They gave me hours and hours of joy.

*

All my wordsmithing mojo is going into work right now, but I don't want to neglect writing here. It allows me to keep in touch with you dear friends, while also affording me writing practice. Nothing will go very wrong if I express myself inartfully here, though it will help to keep the connection between mind and fingers-on-keyboard, staving off the dreaded writer's block. If I'm being honest, I don't really believe in writer's block, at least not for myself. Writer's block is really fear of being judged and found wanting, but my parents buried even more deeply than that fear (which I do possess in abundance) the idea that one must honor one's commitments, and so if I have a deadline, it would actually be worse to blow past it than it would be to turn in a piece of writing that still needs work. Writing, after all, is always in process. I once read that a book is never truly finished, only inked. And indeed, in every book I have had a part in, even after it is inked, I still see edits I wish I could make, ways to make the narrative flow more effortlessly, carrying the reader along. That is the goal anyway. Writing is a kind of progressive sight, as new things rise into awareness that you hadn't thought of before. That's why those books that take ten years to finish end up being so brilliant—case in point: Isabelle Wilkerson's The Warmth of Other Suns. And look, I have banged on about writing again, when that is really not what I intended to do when I opened this page. 

*

I've been thinking a lot about Senator John Fetterman, the new Democrat from Pennsylvania, who checked himself into Walter Reed Hospital this week to be treated for worsening depression. I admire so much that he did that, despite being a public figure, knowing all the vitriol it would draw from right wing doomscrollers, who have said and posted the ugliest things about him since he suffered a stroke at the height of his Senate campaign. He won the seat anyway, because voters saw his humanity. I want to wrap this big, huge man with his valiant heart on his sleeve in emotional safety. I wish I could protect him from the world. A story by Jennifer Senior in The Atlantic reflected on what the senator has been dealing with since being sworn into Congress in January. The piece might be behind a paywall so I'll quote part of it here.

It is said that he was unhappy that he missed out on (and still hasn’t gotten) the time he needed to properly recover from his stroke. And now here he is, in one of the most public-facing jobs imaginable—possibly even more so than the presidency, where you have the luxury of retreating into the antiqued seclusion of the White House, away from reporters and constituents.

On top of this, Fetterman was spending his weekdays alone, apart from his wife and three children, who are still in Braddock, Pennsylvania. For most of the week, he doesn’t have his loved ones by his side, the people with whom he could safely pull off the mask. Instead, he had to perform all day long, then return to an empty home.

Illness, too, can be cruelly isolating. Fetterman was trying to adapt to a demanding, high-intensity job with closed-captioning at his desk and audio-to-text transcriptions of committee hearings; he carries a tablet that converts what his colleagues say into text. This technological wizardry might make his work easier to do, but it also sets him apart, accentuating how different his lot is from everyone else’s. I’m guessing it isn’t easy to experience this difference during every interaction he has—not when his condition is so new, not when he hasn’t had ample time to adjust.

Fetterman has basically been forced to contend with the effects of a severe brain trauma while working an absurdly demanding job in one of the most polarized and toxic political climates the country has ever known.

It breaks my heart, thinking of what these past months have been like for him. I pray he takes the time he needs to heal and gets everything that he requires medically and emotionally, including renewed immersion in the life of his beautiful wife and three children, who seem to anchor him.

*

Bathroom update—it's finally done! It was a lot, especially since the first tile I chose for the floor looked wrong. What I thought would be gentle watercolor swirls of gray in the 6-inch white hex tiles, ended up being hard black slashes in every direction on random tiles, and most of those tiles happened to end up in the middle of the bathroom. In a larger area, it would probably have been okay, but in that postage stamp-sized space, it was jarring. It had been laid when I was away in D.C. for work, and when I got back and saw it, I realized I couldn't bear to live with it, that after already spending so much money to renovate that tiny bathroom, we needed to just go ahead and spend more to have the tiles drilled up and new ones laid. Here's a picture showing the tiles I hated, and the ones I chose to replace them.

My change order put everything back two weeks, but the contractor remained gracious, even as I worked myself up into a frenzy to express how much I needed to have the floor changed, as if I was afraid he might refuse me if I wasn’t emphatic enough. He reminded me that the goal was for me to be happy, and so if I needed the tiles changed, then of course he would make that happen. I felt so guilty about making him do the work twice, my husband merely rolled his eyes, but now I am indeed happy with the new floors, simple white 2-inch hex tiles with platinum gray grout. 

I'm happy with the rest of the bathroom, too, though it is true what my friend Lisa said, it is still only a bathroom, nice and clean and new, nothing rusty and broken in there anymore, yet it changes nothing essential about my life. But it has been accomplished, this thing I have dreamed for some years now, and I am relieved to no longer be looking at woefully discolored grout and grungy looking, worn through enamel in and around the bathtub. I am planning at some point to also redo the other bathroom, though I think I need a good long break from construction happening in the background of my life. The tiny hallway bathroom ended up taking two weeks longer to complete than the kitchen. I suppose that's just how these things go.

Here are a couple of pictures, but they don't really reflect what I see in real life, as the bathroom is so small it's hard to get a good perspective. But it's done at last, and I'm grateful.


22 comments:

  1. Love Rihanna, she seems to be so in control of her life, and does things her way.

    I'm glad you got the tiles on the floor you wanted, nothing worse than choosing something new and then hating it. Enjoy your new bathroom.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I really appreciate your thinking on writer's block and writing in general. And I do like your bathroom a lot.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Even Glen was saying, "I think Rhianna's pregnant!"
    You are so right about how awareness rises after you have started working on an idea. Even just a very small one. It's like we have more thoughts than we knew! Or our brains just go on working with the concepts after we thought we were finished. A sort of magic.
    I, too, feel such great empathy for Senator Fetterman. I just want to wrap my arms around him and tell him how brave and how very strong he has been. He is incredibly brave to be public about his depression and that alone will help so many.
    As to your bathroom- you made the right decision in my opinion. I love those hexagonal tiles. I like the whole bathroom. And I am proud of you for going for what you wanted instead of just keeping the ones you didn't want. That would have annoyed you to your dying day.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Yes on all you said about Senator Fetterman. I really like your bathroom and agree on the tiles.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The bathroom looks beautiful, although I liked the original tiles as well, but it's not my bathroom. Love the colour on the walls.

    It's quite common to have depression after a stroke, apparently there are biochemial changes in the brain, plus you are looking a whole lot closer at your own mortality after a stroke. He needs time to heal which he isn't getting.

    ReplyDelete
  6. If you invited me over, first thing I would ask is "May I use your toilet?"

    ReplyDelete
  7. The bathroom turned out wonderful! And you were right about the tiles. I think partly it's the scale - - we expect the hexagonal tiles to be little, So the 6 inchers would put us in Ant-Man territory, and the pattern, which might have been fine at one or two inches, is aggressive at 6 (I have a bathroom with 1 in white hexagonal tiles from the 1920s) That would have been hard to know without actually seeing it on the floor. It's interesting that the incredibly amazing shower curtain works so well.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Bravo to you for your comments about Senator Fetterman, he is a courageous man for being so open about his struggles post stroke and with depression. One can only hope that his openness will help others who are struggling with it. And as far as the right wingers that are criticizing him, (and worse) the hell with them, he's a better person than any of them could ever hope to be. The bathroom looks great!!

    ReplyDelete
  9. The tulips are so lovely, and the finished bathroom looks beautiful. I loved the comment that Linda Sue left, "May I use your toilet?" Yes, I would ask the same.
    I hope all goes well for John Fetterman and that he has a full recovery. It takes time.
    Take care there.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Senator F. was so brave and so right!!!

    ReplyDelete
  11. The bathroom is gorgeous. Good on you for taking the first set of tiles out, it's so hard to know what something is going to look like until it's done. Senator Fetterman has done a good thing by being open about the depression, and the republicans once again are showing us who they are. Love the tulips, too.

    ReplyDelete
  12. For some reason, I am stuck with Anonymous. Actually, s'me.,Mary G. And I agree with you big time, both about the tile change ... love, love the result ... and the deadline thing. My mother sits in the back of my brain, somewhere, telling me to finish it and turn it in. Regardless. And sometimes the result makes me cringe, but not as much as missing the due date.
    My only miss, ever, was a cookbook, of all things, whose proprietress was at her cottage with no phone, in those pre cellphone days. The printing house took pity on me and extended. That was my last collaboration of that type. I have also done tabloids. On time. Requiring chases around the countryside and, once, making my own (censored) map.
    The wall colour in your Reno is just right.

    ReplyDelete
  13. the bathroom is lovely. I would not have liked those big hex tiles either. and how brave Fetterman was and is to have continued his campaign after his stroke and struggling to do the job he promised to do. the tulips are beautiful, such soft colors. I tried not to miss any deadlines but sometimes it was unavoidable, either having too much work or the job took longer than I guessed. I lost one designer because the first job I did for her was late and apparently she was very hard nosed about that. five or six years later, maybe longer, I gave her a presentation. she didn't remember who I was at first but as soon as she did she basically told me to leave and not come back. I was probably better off.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Your tulips make me smile too! Your comments about Fetterman are spot on. If only people could be kind and supportive as he returns to good health. It seems only right to me. Your bathroom re-do looks fantastic. The extra build time was important to get exactly what you need. Like you, I've chosen things that looked great in a showroom but totally wrong in my house. Re-do is the only alternative.

    ReplyDelete
  15. I love your new bathroom, including that elegant pedestal sink, and agree about the smaller tiles. It looks so clean and sleek! I just did a reno too, to install a shower in the main-level powder room. It's even smaller than your bathroom, and I felt the best thing to do was keep it neutral and simple, so it's all grey and white, a mixture of old and new.

    I worry about Senator Fetterman. A stroke is a brain injury, and like the other brain injury that's been in the spotlight - concussion - needs plenty of time to heal. I feel he hasn't had enough time, and I hope going into hospital for depression treatment allows him the time and care and peaceful quiet that he needs to do so.

    Your most throwaway post is better than what I get when I work and work at mine :)

    ReplyDelete
  16. Oh, those tulips! I kept having to scan back up to look at them again as I read your post.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Tara: the photos of the tulips make me so happy, too. The light and color is transcendent. I've been thinking about Fetterman as well, and feeling great empathy. Having had a stroke myself two years ago, I know it times time to regain everything and that stress is the enemy of recovery.

    As for your bathroom -- good for you for getting what you really want and not settling. It looks great, and will give you joy when you use it. Way to go!

    ReplyDelete
  18. I'm so glad that you wrote about Fetterman -- just an agonizing situation. I shake my head and wonder how, how, how, he could possibly do any of it. Sometimes, or maybe often? I just hate this country and the demands it puts on individuals, the "ideals" it espouses of individualism and achievement and a constant aspiration. Oy vey. And I love your bathroom! I, too, would have gone nuts with those weird black lines -- you did the absolute right thing! Your shower curtain is fabulous -- just the right splash of color and so much serenity!

    ReplyDelete
  19. At the risk of sounding heartless about Fetterman, I will say he chose to run rather than focus on taking time to heal. I watched him in the debate and it was sad and very clear that he was not thinking and functioning well enough yet. He needed time to heal. I'm sorry he didn't make that his focus - but politics is power and hard to give up, and now we in Pennsylvania pay the price. We have one Senator recovering from prostate cancer surgery and one in treatment so I'm thinking we don't have representation right now. My conscience is clear; I did not vote for Fetterman on the basis that it was clear he did not seem fit. And guess what? He wasn't. Kim in PA

    ReplyDelete
  20. This should be an email, but Blogger won't give it out. After reading your comments on 'Spare', I read it. And now I can see why you wrote as you did. A powerful book and nowhere more powerful than on his hatred of racial profiling. It is my opnion that Queen Elizabeth was very open about race and I hope he learned it from her, as the British, in general, are either horrible or ill informed.
    A brave and sensitive young man. One of the things that really got to me was how his 'protection' was pulled in Canada. That had to be with the cooperation of the Canadian government which supplies funding and manpower to the Royals while they are here. I think Harry should have expected that he could not keep the same protection long term, but pulling the assigned guardians with almost no notice really, really stinks.
    Thank you for the review and for the thoughts on it.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Fetterman has depression because he has a brain injury. It's very common and heartbreaking. He is a different person now and the hatred leveled at him for being human and having a stroke is unconscionable. But in these times we are subjected to the worst impulses of our fellow homo sapiens. I sincerely hope he can heal with all the responsibilities he is shouldering now.

    ReplyDelete