Thursday, May 7, 2015

Ten Memories for Ten Years in Chicago


Year 1: I was sitting at the computer desk in my bedroom in my first Chicago apartment, which was the bottom floor of a two-story house in Lakeview. Earlier that day I had stepped on three spring-loaded mousetraps—thankfully with my shoes on—that lined our laundry closet. The traps were the most recent in a long line of attempts by our landlord to handle a mouse infestation on his own, without calling an exterminator. I turned around to see a mouse calmly wandering around the floor of my bedroom. It was the middle of the day and broad daylight. The mouse stopped to look at me briefly, and then unabashedly continued his explorations with no evidence of fear or trepidation. I thought glumly that I was certain I’d be living with mice for the next few months, but at least they’d likely be less disruptive than my human roommates.

Year 2: I was paging through the thick packet of materials sent to me by the U.S. Peace Corps. I had been invited to teach for 27 months in a rural area in Kenya. I read all the information and testimonials. I looked at all the amazing photos. I told myself over and over and over again that I could do it. I could. I could. I could. But all the while I knew, deep down, that badly as I wanted to want to go, I did not really want to go, and ultimately I wouldn’t. And I hated myself for that.

Year 3: I was sitting at a large table in a conference-turned-lunch room at my first post-graduate-school job. I was eating hummus, crackers, and an apple. A colleague looked at me and said, “I stopped eating Triscuits when I saw how many calories are in them.” I tried to laugh the comment off, but she continued, “Seriously. Have you ever looked? You should look.” This conversation made me irrationally angry. I left the lunch table and went immediately to rant about the incident to another female coworker. She looked at me bewilderedly and nodded through the story, not sure how to react. Later she told me that was the first time I had ever spoken to her directly. Now she’s one of my closest friends. Somehow, through a calorie-shaming incident, a friendship was born. Will wonders never cease?

Year 4: I was reluctantly dialing my apartment building’s maintenance manager to tell him my toilet was clogged. AGAIN. I’d had many, many problems with the appliances and plumbing in my 18 months of living in the apartment. As if that wasn’t annoying enough, every call and visit from the maintenance guy felt like a nightmare. He was condescending and rude. He treated any request, no matter how legitimate, as a huge inconvenience. I steeled myself as the phone rang, wondering what his reaction would be this time. “Damnit,” he said. “I am on my way to Indiana.” I said I was sorry, hating myself for apologizing but not knowing what else to say. He stormed in 30 minutes later. “It’s always the girls,” he growled at me. “You’re always dropping your lotion caps in the damn toilet.” I narrowed my eyes. “I keep the lid closed when I’m not using it, actually,” I said. “My cat likes to sit there while I brush my teeth and get ready in the morning.” He rolled his eyes and tossed down the industrial plunger he was using. “Next time, fix it yourself,” he said, and left, slamming the door behind him.

Year 5: I had just moved in to my new downtown apartment, feeling outrageously happy to be living in such a nice building. A friend and I were kneeling on the living room floor, assembling an end table, when we heard a booming sound. I looked out the window and my eyes got as big as saucers. “Oh my gosh!” I said. “What? What is it?” my friend replied, slightly concerned. “I can see the fireworks from my window!” I exclaimed. She turned around to look out the window and smiled ruefully. She was a teacher at a Chicago public school at the time, and said, “Sad, really, how when we hear booming, you think of fireworks but I think of gunfire.”

Year 6: Three days after learning that my friend had been suddenly killed in a car accident, I arrived back at my apartment. It was December 27. My Christmas tree was still up, and I stared at it, wondering why it hadn’t fallen apart at the moment when Stephen died. “Eat,” I thought. “I should eat something.” I pulled an apple out of the refrigerator, but I just stared at that, too. Why hadn’t it instantly gone rotten when Stephen died? Why was everything so whole, so unaffected, so normal? Why wasn’t everything in the world collapsing in on itself the way that I was?

Year 7: I stood in the start corral for the Chicago Half Marathon, my first long-distance race after limping through my first marathon the year before. It was 9/11/11, the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks, and the field was awash with red, white, and blue. I was full of trepidation until the moment my corral started its slow shuffle to the start line. Then, it felt like I was in a scene in a movie where the superhero shows up just in time to defeat the villain. You know the scene, right? The slow-motion walk with some threatening-yet-inspiring music playing in the background? I was the superhero, and I was coming to kick that race’s ass.

Year 8: I was sitting in a first grade classroom, watching a 6-year-old use counters to figure out different combinations of 10 apples, some red and some green. She was placing the counters, which were red on one side and green on the other, onto a grid with 10 spaces on it. After she filled up the grid, she counted the number of counters with green facing up and the number of counters with red facing up, and quickly realized that she had already found that combination. She looked at her grid for a moment, and then grinned as she flipped one counter over, giving her a new combination. I was excited as I watched this, sure that she had just made a breakthrough and would quickly and systematically find all the possibilities by flipping over one counter at a time. However, her next move was to start removing all the counters from her grid. “Wait!” I said. “You know how you just flipped one over? Do you think you could do that again to find another combination?” She looked at me witheringly and shook her head. “No,” she said flatly, removing all the counters from her grid with one swipe of her hand.

Year 9: I was struggling through an 18-mile training run. I was all alone because I had a sinus infection that was bad enough for me to skip the group training run the day before. The infection was certainly still raging as of when I woke up that morning, but slightly better than the day before, so I had decided to give it a shot. The drainage from my sinuses was making me outrageously nauseated, and I was rationing the few tissues I had brought with me. It was abject misery. I don’t remember big sections of the run, or even the moment I finished. I only remember the misery, and the hour or two afterward when I confusedly tried to convince myself that I had actually completed the run. “I did that?” I thought. “Me? Who runs 18 miles with a sinus infection?” I was running the marathon that year in honor of Stephen. I wish I could tell you I felt him that day, but truthfully I didn’t. I wonder now if it was just that I was too was too focused on my own misery, or whether he bailed because it was stupid of me to even attempt it. Both seem equally likely.

Year 10: At 9pm on a Wednesday evening, I walked into a familiar bar. The hostess waved me back to the table where my friends sat. Just as I sat down, the waiter came to deliver a giant BLT that my friends had preordered for me. They cheered at my arrival, immediately enlisting my help to answer the trivia questions they were working on. Earlier that day, I had left a close friend’s house in Florida, having spent a few days helping her out after back surgery. She made no secret of how grateful she was that I came and how sad she was to see me go. As I sat at that table, I thought about how lucky I was to spend time with, in one day, a friend who was so sorry to see me leave and friends who were so happy to see me arrive.

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