on roads taken: for David

we met on a bench
during orientation for transfer students
you picked me to talk to
because I was the only other person
wearing bellbottom jeans
that was the beginning of our brotherhood
and our roads
though different
continue to overlap
through time
shared music
a fondness for whiskey
and once
in another time zone
we shared a house in LA
picked because it had enough bedrooms
for the various people we carried with us
and a wet bar
which was essential
in our eyes
my brother
how is it we
of two opposite personalities
have remained so close
without tension
even during all those pool games
with only one argument
over my driving
settled when you refused
to get out of the car
a thousand years ago
my brother
we sealed our fates
and traveled rocky roads
connected in ways
we don’t fully understand
there have been women
some whose names we no longer recall
boating on a lake
drinking in sleazy Hollywood bars
you backing me up
when my mouth moved faster
than my brain
there were those weekly dinners
in your trailer
my various apartments
rain on rooftops
corn rustling in the wind
my dog romping in a field
as you egged him on
listening to you play
in clubs, in bars, at colleges
charting your life in song
as I sorted out mine
on paper
brothers in word and deed
and finally last summer
as I accompanied you
on your spiritual journey
to your ancestral home
we both knew
it could be no other way
the two of us
in a car
driving into sunsets
Cisco and Pancho
forever

things of value: for Steve

we both have said
at various times in our lives
there were things of value
and the trick was knowing
just which things they were
and so we find
old friend
the things we leave behind
are not always what we discard
but grow instead
in our hearts
stronger than before
if that were even possible
and sight
old friend
is not always done with our eyes
the heart sees better
and years do not dim it
so as our bodies fumble
in the dark
our breath grows shorter
the arms no longer able to carry
the weight they once held
we still
old friend
remain connected
ten thousand miles
cannot break that bond
too many decades have come and gone
too many miles traveled together
up and down and across
two continents
we closed too many restaurants
watched fireworks over two oceans
driven or rode or flown
over too much territory
climbed a glacier
stood on mountains
seen our share of whales
there have been too many crabs eaten
too much wine drunk
too many glasses of brandy shared
and so much trouble
we talked our way into
and out of
over these many, many years
Bill Mohr once said
seeing us together for the first time
as you helped me assemble a gas barbecue
in my backyard
that he understood why
we were such good friends
more like brothers
your father called us a vaudeville team
and we did routines
to amuse ourselves
more than anyone else
in countless states
in foreign countries
and though I know your eyes
my eyes
have watered of late
these thousands of miles
these long years now
keeping us from laughing
at our own jokes
rest assured
old friend
our vaudeville days are not over
and since you can no longer
make the trip alone
I promise
old friend
I’ll be there yet
one morning

exile’s letter: after Li Bai: for Gene

the candle flickers
the glass empties itself
the wind rustles the flag outside my window
and my thoughts are with you
old friend
you put aside my book to write
to tell me of your heart
memories, you say
of what and who we were, are
you ask when will I return
my company, you say
you sorely miss
I see you
old friend
in a picture on my shelf
your beard now grey
I think
and your hair thin
much like mine
not like in LA
the car ride up Topanga Canyon
at two in the morning
to see a woman we both loved
you huddled on the floor in back
while I drove one-handed
a bottle of scotch in the other
we were crazy then
but somehow survived
you long to hold me close
you say
and I, too, cling to air
we need to share a glass
old friend
let Steve watch us drink ourselves to God
and when the bottle empties
there will be another to uncork
and you and I and Steve
old friend
will retell stories
of pregnant ladies with axes
of Shakespeare in the park
of Leo’s potato salad
of the silence between cuts
and we will laugh
old friend
till the sun peeks through the curtains
and warms the world
once again

things change to remain the same: for Maureen

it was some fish restaurant on the coast
you knew the owner, I think
and a TV star was romancing some starlet
a few tables away
while you told me about the man
in your life
and I spoke of the woman
in mine
yours a success story
mine one of loss and pain
and we drank two bottles of wine
then I switched to bourbon
you to white russians
and it was close to dawn
when we weaved our way to our cars
you off to Venice Beach
me to Santa Monica
all the guys at I&L would fantasize about you
and ask my permission
to ask you out
Vimal said I was protective of you
and I suppose I was
you were always a bit vulnerable
and me, your protector
the long island kid
you still have my denim jacket
and high school letter
one day I’ll have to travel back in time
to retrieve them
and as you read your poetry to me
this summer in Dorsoduro
I couldn’t help wondering
what was wrong with those California boys
to let you go
your smile
dear friend
it is the same
a thousand years later
and sitting in a restaurant
that night in Moda
I saw the same beautiful girl
you always were, are
no matter how things change over time
some things
you old friend
stay the same

a weight on the heart

I was at the home of one of my teachers who I am quite fond of and her mother was coaxed into telling fortunes from the grinds in a cup of Turkish coffee, which is a popular form of fortune telling here. I don’t usually subject myself to these things, since they conjure up memories of my mother’s friend, Mrs. Saks, who told fortunes with cards and would periodically come to the house to read my mother’s fortune. I mean, as kids we are all somewhat fascinated with guessing the future, but I have enough trouble reconciling the past and dealing with the present these last few decades to worry too much about the future. I just always figure it will take care of itself.

Anyway, back to the coffee cup. Her mother was telling our fortunes, the three of us teachers there, and so I went along with it and had mine told, too. I really don’t remember the details except one sentence: that there was a weight on my heart. I think she suggested I go to a church and light a candle to pray for it to be lifted, which, I must confess, I did yesterday while waiting for my barber to finish eating at both his and my favorite restaurant so he could give me my monthly haircut. So I guess you could say I knew there was truth in that statement because I have been feeling a weight on my heart for quite some time now.

Interestingly I also had the second conversation with Mete, the director of my college, yesterday in the garden while I was on break from my class. He sat next to me on the bench I was occupying and asked me what was wrong. This is the second time he has asked that in about a week’s time. He wanted to know why I was so sad lately and asked what was troubling me. Usually I avoid answering questions like that, make a joke, or get vague on people, but yesterday, I don’t know, his concern came right after a student I like a lot sat and asked me why I was always alone and did I feel out of place here in Turkey. And yes, I said, I did. And I also told Mete that many things were troubling me but one in particular was that I was so misunderstood in this country and so felt out of place. I paraphrased Clarence Darrow which caused me to go back to my old notebook and get the quote right to post later that day. He seemed to understand and asked who was misunderstanding me and I, of course, feeling somewhat vulnerable, answered honestly everyone in this country, including the people at this college. People here just don’t seem to get me right.

Another teacher, one of the ones whose fortune was also told last Saturday, and who is the closest thing to a friend I have here in Istanbul, keeps reminding me that we foreigners are always misunderstood here (she’s a foreigner, too) because Turks don’t understand the concept of friendship between people, especially between men and women, the old and the young, foreigner and native, like Russians and Americans do. There is some sort of suspicion about it, that it has underlying reasons, a hidden agenda, say, and so can’t be real. And I came to realize once again why I miss my country these days. It isn’t actually the country but my friends there, both old and young, male and female, former classmates, colleagues, students, staff who I’ve loved as a friend and who have loved me as one in return. The many who have not thought there was anything unnatural about the attention and support I gave them. The many, who unlike the people here, appreciate and value a person like me and who I taught so much to, learned so much from, for friendship is always a two way street.

So this weight that has been laying on my heart for quite some time now will most likely never be lifted as long as I am away from the very people who can lift it. And yet to return, from this self-imposed exile, is not an easy thing to do. For there was betrayal back there, jealousies, pettiness, that has left a bitterness that still exists in my heart, too. I’ve dealt with pettiness and jealousy before and I’m tired of being judged by people who don’t read books, experience poetry, listen to great music, appreciate art, go to foreign films, are not open to the world beyond their own cultures and their limited, provincial minds.

A dilemma, I guess, and one I’ve been trying to work through for what seems like months now. Perhaps I am destined to live with this weight on my heart for I have to admit sadness is not exactly alien to me. Candles will probably not help, nor will I expect people to change here, nor will I. I am, as I’ve often told people, and who my old friends will admit to being also, a dinosaur just lumbering along, looking for that patch of ground where I can lie down and find peace. I thought it might be in Europe somewhere, and it still might be here yet, but most likely it will not be among these people, or at least not the ones I know now.

And so I must learn to bear it as best I can, forget these narrow-minded people who are mostly around me, and take some solace in the fact that I can be peaceful in my neighborhood, can find peace when I travel, can find peace in a good book, in the completion of a good piece of writing, in a meal I’ve cooked, at a restaurant where the waiters know my name. All that may not lift the weight, but I’ve been carrying this weight around for a long time now, and only lack the companionship, the friends who would let me forget it momentarily in good conversation, a glass of wine, and laughter through the night.

If people can’t see me for who I am, but suspect me of somehow being less than honest, impure in my motives, than they are not worth talking to, spending time with, giving attention and encouragement to. And I say the hell with them. I just don’t have that many years left to squander on people too blind or dumb or narrow-minded to appreciate what I have to offer. Life is becoming increasingly short and thus precious for me and I place too much value on what I am to waste it on the undeserving. So I’ll pull back from those who can’t tell the difference between fool’s gold and the real thing and seek out kindred spirits like those I left behind in the US when I came here. I know, having spent two hours in a deep, fulfilling conversation with a man I hope to be doing more with in the future, that other dinosaurs like me still exist in the world and other young people are still open to partake of what we have accumulated over the years.

Those of you who know me from my LA and NY days, who know of how I’ve always tried to expand horizons of others from my time with the Boy Scouts to the bookstore through my work with my beloved immigrants to now, know the moral code I try to live by and the price one pays to live by it, know who and what I am. And, of course, it strikes me as ironic that I am so misunderstood when all someone would have to do is read the books I write, or read the personal pieces I write here on this blog about my life to know I have spent my whole adult life trying to help people without expecting very much, apart from an occasional nod of appreciation, in return. My character is demonstrated by what I have done, is reflected in the prose style I have developed over the years, is, therefore, in deed as well as words. There is no mystery to who I am, nor to my motives in doing what I do. I am that part missionary, part maverick who was branded as such by those who got to know me all my life. And those of you who have read these personal pieces on this blog and have come to understand and identify with this pull and push between the missionary and the maverick can comprehend why a weight can lay heavy on one’s heart.

But I must learn to look past these times toward another future. And if I can’t create the friendships here that I have back there than maybe it will be time to reconsider returning. I just know I’m no longer happy where I work because of changes in policies and the misunderstandings of those I work with which leads me to remembering what my Uncle Mike once said, when you don’t like your job, you either change it into one you can like or you change jobs. That’s a thought to contemplate but for now, though, I’ll just focus on the week’s vacation I’m taking as of sunrise.

So I’ll go off to Italy tomorrow, with a few good books to keep me company, to eat the food I grew up with, to sit on balconies of the hotel rooms I’ve reserved with views of the sea, to listen to stirring music in an opera house, to visit my great grandfather’s home, to see great art, walk ancient streets, be surrounded by a people with warmth in their hearts who will not judge me, and remember what I have learned about life: you take whatever joy you can find when you can, where you can, and however you can. And the hell with the rest.

My Mother, Part I: Cards

She was a force of nature, a short, dynamic, attention-seeking woman who charmed all who knew her. She would dance the tarantella in between serving courses at our family dinners, and sing off-key oblivious to criticism to Al Martino albums. She was a foot shorter than me but my long legs had to do double time to keep up with her when walking. And even though the weekly poker games at the dining room table were only for pennies, she took it so seriously that you would think they were playing for souls.
She actually played cards twice in my memory: Saturday nights with Uncle Joe (a cigar in his mouth, his green visor pulled down low on his forehead), Aunt Bernie (placid, accepting defeat before she even looks at her hand), her sister Mary (who fretted over each hand as if the mortgage depended on winning), Charlie (who was a reluctant card player), and then later, after death came round to our house again, during the week with “the girls”: Cousin Rose, Aunt Katie (my father’s youngest sister), Rose Interligi (my mother’s best friend), and Ann Montaleri. It’s only for pennies, but this is serious stuff, that is until break time when they have their coffee and cake, gossip about the TV shows, that rascal J.R. Ewing, some mini-series starring Richard Chamberlain, their children, grandchildren, those damned Republicans.
I stop in on my way home from teaching, make myself a sandwich, ask about Rose’s son Bobby, my old classmate, my cousin JoJo in California, my cousin Nicky in Queens, Ann’s granddaughter Annie who I once briefly dated, watch them resume playing, my mother asking if I have any pennies for her, she’s losing, it seems, which is not usual, and I think how lovely these old ladies are, old friends for over 40 years, some like my Aunt Katie and Cousin Rose, a lifetime, and I can’t help but wish I’ll always find them here, Al Martino or Jerry Vale singing in the background, their men, long gone, waiting for them at home, and me, eating my Sicilian salami on rye bread, leaning against the sink, with tears in my eyes because nothing, nothing ever lasts as long as we’d like.