At A Loss (For Words)

Valentine
Rose Avenue

The weight of this sad time we must obey;

Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say.  

Albany in King Lear

 

First, know this going in: it is an impossible conversation. Or very very difficult. After a death. Words are insufficient. They just won’t work. Shakespeare may say it best. And it wasn’t just Bee Gees who sang about words being “all I have.”

Some folks first learn about death while at play. As a child in Detroit if you got caught, “counting the cars in a funeral” procession, your friends chanted that you’d be the next to die:

“The worms crawl in, the worms crawl out

The worms play pinochle on your snout

They roll you up in a long white sheet

And lay you down six feet deep…”

Verse upon verse, funnily about the scary. This goes way back to, “Ring around the rosey/pocketful of posies/Ashes ashes we all fall down,” which I’ve just learned Snopes.com claims does not come from the plague in Europe in the 1300s. http://www.snopes.com/language/literary/rosie.asp

[But another children’s choosing-up-sides rhyme, Engine Engine #9 train going off the tracks is a death trip, too, right? See GOOD HUMOR MAN entry from December 22 2015]

Worm-play on your snout works as an amulet. We injected lyrical spells into each other, arming up via curses to crack us up. Said across a circle.

Do you know any others? Perhaps there exists an Allen Lomax-curated lp collection out there — “Children’s Funeral Procession Songs of the U.S. Possibly Lifted from Great Britain.”  You sure don’t see processions anymore.

on Abbot Kinney
new mural off Abbot Kinney

When out of words dumbstruck we say someone is “at a loss” for words. Ram Dass [See DIRECTING CONVERSATION entry, February 2 2016] tries to counter this with his work with dying people in hospices. There he tries to “create a space” where someone can open up and express themselves – a space to maybe find words, continuing to play in the game of life before hanging up the skates.

“Tell me how your parents died,” she said. I couldn’t believe my ears.

“I beg your pardon?” I said.

“What good is ‘Hello’?” she said.

She had stopped me in my tracks.

“I’ve always thought it was better than nothing,” I said, “but I could be wrong.”

“What does ‘Hello’ mean?” she said.

And I said, “I had always understood it to mean ‘Hello.’”

“Well it doesn’t,” she said. “It means, ‘Don’t talk about anything important.’ It means, ‘I’m smiling but not listening, so just go away.’”

She went on to avow that she was tired of just pretending to meet people. “So sit down here,” she said, “and tell Mama how your parents died.”

“Tell Mama!” Can you beat it?  

Kurt Vonnegut in his novel Bluebeard

Can you beat that? Vonnegut!

When conveying the news about a death it’s weird today because you can’t just say, “You better sit down” like they always say in the movies. Most people are already sitting, in front of their computers.

When singer Dan Fogelberg died in 2007, I went online to remember one of his tunes and I was amazed to discover scores of comments, memorial pages created at a YouTube link. Everyone mourning together via text, sending memories in video. I don’t deal well with death, but this certainly helped. Obviously it wasn’t a face-to-face mourning. But I felt I was in the middle of a new kind of moving conversation.

Back Pocket Banter: Five Ways To Convo

Do people find you comforting?

How do you comfort people?

How do you deal with loss?

Do you go on YouTube and type up your memories?

If you could live and die during any period of history, which would you choose?

obit of a conversationalist
Obit of convo maven

Activity

Hug until the other person lets go.  (Hey once we start hugging why do we ever let go? To get back to this thing the artist formerly-known as Prince calls life?)

Get into a conversation: According to many family traditions, funerals and weddings are the best times to catch up with uncles, aunts, cousins and cousins once removed. Ask about their lives and you’ll get good stories. How is that sister-in-law’s sister on the Cape and her kids at Keene State? There are Peace Corps missions and scientists and sports legends to learn about!

Family convos can remind you that funerals are to remind you that engaging in life is worthwhile and worth even more when humor, sadness, the spices of life and death—voila! —are added. 

Bonus!

For conversations after funerals, actress Elaine Stritch recommended having a couple of drinks. She told me her next memoir would be called, “How Drinking Saved My Life.” In wintertime there’s Irish coffee, known for having loosened up many a tongue across the San Francisco Bay area. In summer the vodka tonic. I think I still prefer silence.

The wages of dying is love

Yes you cling

because I like you only sooner

than you will go down

the path of vanished alphabets.  

Galway Kinnell

 

Though men and women must communicate with words,

angels can talk to one another in silence.   Dante

  

seen at a Starbucks in Burbank
Starbucks in Burbank

 

 

Read More

Earliest Conversations Known To (this) Man & the problem with um….oh yeah, Attention Spans Today!

 

Ya think?

 

Play is young people’s work.  

Gisele Ragusa, Education Specialist at USC

 

“Want a penny? Go kiss Jack Benny!”

“Want a nickel? Get me a pickle!”

“Want a dollar? Go upstairs and holler!”  

Children’s game in Detroit, circa 1960s

 

Remember how fun all your various and sundry youthful back-and-forth could be?

Those first calls-and-responses, how you remained playground true? Instead of lining up the way the teachers told us, we circled up, setting off and calling out! Was your banter also cruel? Think taunting. The drawing of lines in the dirt. Telling tattletales.  Topping.

At my school in Detroit, topping was expressed this way: “Capped on you!” Cap was our slang for that sharply jabbed comeback line. It could be slashing, sardonic, like an early killer app when applied rightly to knock everyone out.  What Funkmaster George Clinton called playing, “the dozens.” *

“[Today] They call it ‘dissing each other,’ Clinton said. “That’s like something you doing starting at five, six, seven years old right on through school. ‘Your momma this, your poppa that’. But you aint supposed to let anyone get to you up to the point that you want to fight.”

Making words before war. Words so we wouldn’t go to war. Playing badinage badminton instead of bullying someone down to the gravel. “Up against the locker, red neck mutha!”

But can you relate today?

Not about capping on each other. I mean, as an adult, do you know how best to talk with wee ones, those beginning conversants just getting their chat on?

 

EJ watches his parents sign copy

 

Welcome to their world by getting in their game, where children love to live in the best moments made available to them at the time.

By paying respectful attention to them, you get to “Be There Then” instead of off with all them other adults yoga-ing back and forth in an attempt to be here now. So cultivate convo. Arthur Miller wrote in “Death of A Salesman” that “Attention must be paid!”

To which you add: “And paid in advance! Or you get nothing!”

Back Pocket Banter

What are you doing right now?

Ever seen anybody do this? (Do some kind of repetitive physical shtick – they’ll love it.)

Hey, that’s a really nice _____ (drawing, sneaker glow-glob, skateboard)

What is that over there? By pointing out something you’ll click with them.

What games do you like to play?

Activity

If all else fails, treat them like adults. Use simple language and say something complimentary. Humans of all ages love to be complimented; you’ll be surprised at the sentences you set off.

Mimic a child. Move in outrageous ways. (Convo Tip: Doing something outrageous often beats saying something outrageous, which doesn’t turn heads anymore unless you are trying to get thrown out of a Peet’s Coffee store in North Berkeley or somewhere by being anti-pc.)

Sharing books with children is always great. Another popular way to communicate is by singing. As Catherine Blyth writes in her book The Art of Conversation A Guided Tour of a Neglected Pleasure: “The key to social harmony is taking turns and timing.” **

Studies indicate that dinner conversation is a more potent vocabulary-booster than reading, and stories around the kitchen table help children build resilience. Amy K. Weisberg, Topanga Elementary Teacher, Topanga Canyon Messenger January 16 2014

 

Bonus!

Actor and singer-songwriter Rob Elk offers this playful song to inspire the youngins…

Make Something!

I’m going to get some glue, maybe some string!

And in a couple of hours I’m going to make something!

Get a bunch of paper and some Play-Doh!

I’ll make some thing to last you never know! 

‘Cuz I always feel great when I create a little something!

Well, its a rainy day can’t go out to play!

And who wants to watch YouTube anyway? (Used to be TV)!

Break out the scissors. Hey mamma throw in some paint!

The way I’m working so quiet you’d think I was a saint !

‘Cuz making something makes me feel so good!

Just like I knew it always would! !

Some macaroni art for my mom!

Some pipe cleaner men for my dad!

Something for you with hearts on it if you don’t make me mad! 

And when I’m done. Well baby I’ve gotta run!

If you’re looking for someone to clean up this mess I’m not the one!

I’m not a janitor, I’m just a kid!

And if you think I made up this song well yes I did!

‘Cuz making something makes me feel so good!

Just like I knew it always would! !

‘Cuz I always feel great when I create a little something! !!!!!

 

Here’s another Rob Elk funny song, this one in time for Christmas:

http://www.madmusic.com/song_details.aspx?SongID=39390

 

* George Clinton interview with Gerry Fialka:  http://laughtears.com/GClinton.html

** Catherine Blyth book: http://www.amazon.com/The-Art-Conversation-Neglected-Pleasure/dp/1592404979

 

 

Read More