CAROL

carol
Carol is based on a Patricia Highsmith novel, The Price of Salt. Cate Blanchett plays a wealthy mother whose marriage is failing. She goes to a department store to buy a Christmas gift and finds an attraction to a cute clerk played by Rooney Mara. Cete Blanchett’s husband files for divorce and Cate decides to take a holiday car trip. She invites Rooney Mara. Plenty of smoldering glances in this movie! The plot is predictable. No surprises, just good acting. GRADE: B+

PATRICK’S EULOGY FOR HELEN GAGE, HIS GRANDMOTHER

HELEN GAGE
It’s just not possible to summarize a person’s life. Not for anyone, but certainly not for Helen Gage, my grandma, who lived 96 years. And I was only here, born and existing, for the last third of that.

So I can’t understand the earliest parts of her life, growing up in the jazz age of the Roaring Twenties, losing a father and a sister before her age was in the double digits. I don’t know what it meant to be a teenager during the deepest, darkest part of the Great Depression. I can’t know what it meant to marry a man and then have him and all three of his brothers (and two of hers) go off to fight a global war as the memory of the last one is still painfully recent. I don’t know what it means to inspect triscuits at the Niagara Falls Nabisco plant during a war, a process I assume is now automated. These pieces of her life are so far removed from me, from what living is in the 21st Century, that I can’t, that most of us here just can’t understand any description I might try to offer.

But although I’ve now seeded this with enough chronology to please those of you who want to remember grandma by those facts we can list, the items that are easy to document and measure … the real reason I don’t want to represent her in that way is that I don’t believe that is how she would remember her own life, what would matter the most to her.

I spent a lot of time with Grandma growing up, she wasn’t a strange relative I saw on the occasional holiday, she was someone I spent most days with, someone who was a vital part of making me who I am. I can still picture every room of her house on 98th street, the house that was hers for more than half her life. The bad color choices made on the bathroom tiles. Collecting apples from the tree in the backyard. Playing in the exciting and spongily-carpeted attic. Hiding behind the bed in the back room when her brother came to visit.

But the memories that will last with me my entire life are those that remind me of the care and time she spent with me. Teaching me and Katie to make her particular brand of incredibly thin crust cheese pizza. Rolling out the dough so sparely across the cookie sheet that little holes would need to be patched, or rather, we would try to patch them, by swirling the dough with our fingers, and then unsuccessful, would give up and move on. The pizza would still be perfect with a few little holes.

Because Grandma didn’t openly dwell on the little holes in pizza or the little holes in life. She didn’t obsess over the worst times, she looked forward to her family, and her friends. She watched the weather. She kept going, one day at a time.

She lived thirty five thousand one hundred and thirty nine days. [That’s a lot of one days at a time!] And each one of these was filled with tiny moments where she would read to us as kids, where she would make hot dogs or find a fruit by the foot, where she would check to see what color Vanna’s dress was (not on weekends), where she would do her exercises, where she would wear some exciting new dress — and then later, sweatshirt, where she would sit in the florida room to mediate, where she would slip me twenty dollars, where she would sneak something into or out of her room, where she would pick me up from school (or come rescue me because I was sick) and we would stop to run an errand on the way home and just maybe also get dairy queen, where we would play a hand of cards, or where she would show me all nine steps required to thread her 1950s sewing machine which I still have and use and carefully thread.

These little details, all the little bits of love that she gave to me were what defined her. Were, I think, what gave her life everyday.

And I’ve seen pictures, I’ve spent the last week pouring over photographs of a stylish, confident looking young woman, who raised two beautiful strong girls, who grew up and have families of their own.

I’ve been reminded of her in each decade and role, daughter, sister, wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother. And I know that all those little details of love that she showered on me, the smiles and glances and goodies and hugs, every other member of her family, all of her friends also received. I know she spent over sixty years loving people before I was even born.

She took care of all of us as much as she thought she could. And then, these last few years, was so disturbed by the idea that we now had to take care of her. She knew, that for each new one day at a time, she lost a little bit more independence, a little bit more sight, hearing, a little bit more mobility. Each day she lost the ability to do one more thing that she could once do, she lost the ability to remember one more story. My mother, somehow with infinite strength, stepped in and did as much as she could to help her, to take care of her, to make every one of these last days as wonderful and meaningful and comfortable as they could be.

And she died 96 years in to a wonderful life, in her own bed and surrounded by her family. By all those people that meant everything to her and that she gave everyday to.

The last time she saw me, the day before she died, she said it was amazing that I was there. And it was, but not because I flew some 2100 miles to get there in front of her, in our kitchen that day. It’s not amazing because of the change in technology, the progress of the world that she witnessed over nearly a century. But amazing because without her, none of us would have been there in that room, none of us would be here in this room.

To remember her best, we aren’t going to list the components of her life, but rather we should love and be there for our friends and our family. We should give them a phone call, a hug, a smile.

We should go with them on a trip to Poland.

Grandma was known for her love of Poland, and all things Polish, used not in a derogatory, but rather a loving rooted-in-our-heritage way. Occasionally, I would bring home books by Polish authors, and she would teach me how to pronounce their names, which was useful because in Polish every letter makes a sound an English speaker would never expect. So I learned names, at least how to say: Wisława Szymborska and Zbigniew Herbert and Czesław Miłosz. Miłosz was a Polish poet and essayist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature. He died in 2004, at the age of 93. Not quite as old as grandma, but no “spring chicken” as she might say.

I’d like to close with one of his poems, one of the many that reflects on death, and what comes after: first in my own badly-mangled Polish and then in English.

SPOTKANIE

Jechaliśmy przed świtem po zamarzłych polach,
Czerwone skrzydło wstawało, jeszcze noc.

I zając przebiegł nagle tuż przed nami,
A jeden z nas pokazał go ręką.

To było dawno. Dzisiaj już nie żyją
Ni zając, ani ten co go wskazywał.

Miłości moja, gdzież są, dokąd idą
Błysk ręki, linia biegu, szelest grud —
Nie z żalu pytam, ale z zamyślenia.

ENCOUNTER

We were riding through frozen fields in a wagon at dawn.
A red wing rose in the darkness.

And suddenly a hare ran across the road.
One of us pointed to it with his hand.

That was long ago. Today neither of them is alive,
Not the hare, nor the man who made the gesture.

O my love, where are they, where are they going
The flash of a hand, streak of movement, rustle of pebbles.
I ask not out of sorrow, but in wonder.

Goodbye Grandma,
We will miss you,
We will wonder after you,
We love you.

Patrick Gage Kelley
December 29, 2015

NY JETS VS. BUFFALO BILLS

ny jets vs. buffalo bills
Rex Ryan must find it galling that his former team, the New York Jets, are about to enter the Playoffs while his current team is about to miss the Playoffs for the 16th straight year. Winter has finally arrived in Western New York. Snow is the forecast at game-time with a nasty windchill in the 20s. For the Jets, this is a Playoff game: if they win, they’re in. The Jets control their own Destiny. The Bills have nothing to play for. Too many injures and a lack of motivation will probably produce a blow-out. How will your favorite NFL team do this final week of the regular season?

BROOKLYN

Brooklyn-Poster-2
Colm Toibin’s novel Brooklyn provides the template for the movie version of Brooklyn. In 1952, a young Irish woman (played by the astonishing Saoirse Ronan) travels to the United States when she cannot find work at home. She leaves her widow mother and her older sister to seek her fortune in America. We get to see her life in a boarding house in Brooklyn, battling homesickness, working in a swanky department store, going to Night School to learn bookkeeping, while adjusting to American food and culture, new friends, and eventually romance with an Italian plumber. The metamorphosis of a mousy Irish girl into a confident woman lights up the screen. This is a quiet movie with few special effects. But, there’s plenty of good old-fashioned drama and great acting. GRADE: B+

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

fireworks-3
Patrick took this photo in Frisco, Colorado. Enjoy ABBA’s “Happy New Year” below. And, have a Happy New Year! Do you have any New Year’s Resolutions? Mine is to try and lose weight and not to buy the same book twice!

FORGOTTEN MUSIC #58: VAN MORRISON HIS BAND AND THE STREET CHOIR [Remastered & Expanded]

van morrison
Back in 1970, I was delighted listening to Van Morrison’s His Band and the Street Choir. This album included some of my favorite Van Morrison songs: “Domino,” “Blue Money,” and “Street Choir.” This new remastered and expanded CD sounds fabulous! The BONUS TRACKS are fun to listen to. Van Morrison was riding the success of Astral Weeks and Moondance. This album solidified his career. What’s your favorite Van Morrison song?
TRACK LIST:
Domino
Crazy Face
Give Me a Kiss
I’ve Been Working
Call Me Up in Dreamland
I’ll Be Your Lover, Too
Blue Money
Virgo Clowns
Gypsy Queen
Sweet Jannie
If I Ever Needed Someone
Street Choir
BONUS TRACKS:
Call Me Up in Dreamland (Take 10)
Give Me a Kiss (Take 3)
Gypsy Queen (Take 3)
I’ve Been Working
I’ll Be Your Lover, Too

THE SECRET OF SATAN’S SPINE By Kenneth Robeson (Will Murray)

secret of satan's spine
As a long-time fan of the Doc Savage series, I celebrate these new volumes written by Will Murray (and Lester Dent) every time they appear. This new adventure, The Secret of Satan’s Spine, features a hot blonde leading Doc Savage and his team to the Caribbean to solve a mystifying puzzle with global implications. Altus Press does a great job packaging this series. I really like this cover by Joe DeVito. If you’re in the mood for classic pulp fiction with a dash of High Adventure, The Secret of Satan’s Spine is your ticket to fun! GRADE: B+

HELEN GAGE (October 8, 1919-December 22, 2015) R.I.P.

family at christmas 2011

Diane’s mother, Helen Gage, died in her bedroom with her family around her. Helen lived with us for 16 years. For most of those years, Helen was healthy and mobile. But in 2015 there was a relentless decline. Helen fell. Her deafness increased. She suffered from macular degeneration and osteoporosis. Helen weighed 70 pounds at the end. She had trouble keeping any food down. Breathing was labored. Helen woke up one morning and asked Diane and Katie, “Is the horror over?”

Having a daughter who works for hospice made the whole end-of-life process much easier to bear. Katie knew what was going on and helped us deal with the various hospice nurses and assistants who came to help Helen. Hospice services allowed Helen to die pain-free in her own bed–not in a hospital room–and with her family by her side.

Living to 96 is quite a feat. But much credit goes to Diane who provided world-class care-giving for many of those years. At the end, caring for Helen was 24/7 yet somehow Diane managed it. She deserves all the accolades I can shower on her. And Patrick’s calming presence helped all of us cope with the finality of the event.

Helen is at peace now. We have to deal with the heart-ache of her absence.