Tag Archives: sociology

“In Drive.”

Driving had always set the creative juices flowing. Was it some law of metaphysics — or, something else?

Heading home from an egg pickup in the outlying county today, I let the local “oldies” station cue up Cher. Setting aside her familiar anthems and dance tunes, they chose a real antique:

“The Way Of Love.”

Translated from the French (“J’ai le Mal de Toi”, by Jacques Dieval, English lyrics by Al Stillman), Cher hadn’t been the first, to record it; Kathy Kirby had done those honors – in 1965.

As the lyrics unfolded, carried by Cher’s throaty moan, and the music swelled into its sweeping, orchestral fill I realized that five months of estradiol and progesterone had finally hit their Full Monty stride. That long, surely lost connection between the popular song and blood flow to the groin had come roaring back. I was, in a word, flushed .

About a year ago, my older friend Sally had urged me to resume bioidentical hormone therapy. And, she’d said, go whole hog – get the full formula. Recent studies had shown that, for women over 65, the bone loss halting benefits of estradiol greatly outweighed any overblown health risks cited by one, since discredited, paper.

But, she forewarned. I’d feel so good, she said. And, my drive? Ohboy. Yep. That.

Now, so many months into the trek toward Mojo renewal this song didn’t just bring back remote, abstract memories of a first crush in Kindergarten. No; this time, I was embodied.

By agony.

Oh, hadn’t I missed that agony.

Hormones make longing for the object of your heart an aching pain for which you yearn uncontrollably. They capture all your senses, and render you jelly in the fetal position. They send you, raving, out into the public like a pimply fourteen year old screaming in the front row of a Beatles concert. You are utterly un-repressed. And, you love every minute of it.

I’d been remembering those decades past, when the body was still producing hormones naturally. Always heavy on testosterone (still), at the low end of the progesterone scale (convenient birth control), when the estrogen ran hot I was a hyper nympho. Add to that a determination to remain the last virgin (and, failing), one might have regularly witnessed any number of spontaneous if cyclic emissions from any physiologic orifice. Had I a whale’s spout, only the Queen of the Deep would have surpassed my combustive, projectile power.

But, this all came (npi) with immense frustration. Having only rare release for a relentless rush to the cadence every month, there were sprints of manic obsession (with men), episodes of sobbing into the full length mirror and, facing professional deadlines, near catatonia until the last monthly trickle brought those few, precious days of regulating relief.

Once menopause had closed the cervix for good, years of comparative peace ensued. I loved looking at men, and feeling, well, nothing. The occasional exception being the one in a hundred “drop dead” stud I’d give him at best a fleeting, ironic glance, merely remembering the power he would have had over me, now grateful to be free of its clutches.

But, Time, father of the Mona Lisa smile, eventually found me wanton.

On cue, I’d taken the bait.

Now, you’ll spot her a mile away. Overdressed, including boots, at every event. Freshly made up at midnight, the newest additions to that kit the eye lash curler and waterproof mascara. No matter the discovery of 500 ppm of aluminum in the dark brown Henna used to mask encroaching grey; now, she wears her salt and pepper locks like a boss. She is me. Welcome to Shangri-la.

I’m in drive. Either move, or stand and receive.

The law of attraction rules this road, and I have a destination to reach before the big sleep.

.

.

.

.

Copyright 11/26/24 Ruth Ann Scanzillo * originally titled “Hormoaning.” 11/25/24. All rights those of the author, whose story it is and whose name appears above this line. No copying – in part; whole; or, by translation – permitted without either direct request of the author or by blog sharing exclusively. Thank you for respecting individual intellectual property rights.

littlebarefeetblog.com

Under the Waning, Crescent Moon.

The age of the Android had descended.

She, always a good ten years behind the moment, was ever the last to know.

Now, emitting from her phone, the luring words of an astrologer. Today’s topic? the Moon Sign.

She remembered reading about this, awhile back. Unlike the Sun’s vague profiling of character and propensity, seems the Moon Sign was the real marker for actual, motivated behavior.

The voice, likely AI, prattled on, knowing as it does in the world of preconceived algorithm that the longer it held forth without relent the greater the likelihood the hopelessly impressionable human would take its bait.

Perhaps to prove herself a real person, and with reluctant acknowledgement of her own weakness, she plucked the fruit from its tree.

What was her exact TIME of birth? This was the key to unlocking the all-knowing.

Well, that would be its own story.

Mum, wide of pelvis, already having endured the truest of natural births at home ( marched in circles around the oak diningroom table by a first born sister during that which the latter’s narrow hips were sure was just phase one of labor, only to plead to be allowed to give her impending child birth ) had all too vivid memories of which stage her now second born was presenting as she lay in the hospital, flanked by a flock of nursemaids. The year, 1957, the obstetrician having delivered an entire generation already, this scene was as predictable as a day in the life of an episode of Happy Days.

Except that it was night, on a Friday, at primetime, and raining; the doc, at the bar; and, the clamoring newborn was crowning.

She, that hapless infant, would finally see natural light a good fifty minutes after cranial compression in the vaginal canal had suffocated the entire lobe responsible for numeric application. The doctor ultimately appearing, gurney raced to the delivery room and she was out, screaming bloody murder, her grandmother later describing a baby completely covered in “dark hair”, the harbinger of as yet unrealized import, a caul*, never to be acknowledged by the Christian Fundamentalists.

Said Christians would, however, have plenty to say about astrologers -soothsayers all, demon-infested, poison in its purest form. Having raised her to be above all God fearing, she now fulfilled her latent visit – pungent of residual trepidation – with the significance of the Moon Sign.

Rather removed from the glowing attributes of the Taurus Sun Sign, her Moon Sign was Aries – and, appeared a totally different mammal. Passion; anger; a struggle to both form and maintain human relationships; the driver of all action, the bearer of opinions and insights pronounced unpopular, and the leader of everything worth any effort. Even the sight of a waning, crescent moon was the least likely to draw a crowd, that final phase before disappearing entirely from the eye’s capacity to see.

How familiar obscurity had become. Once a life lived under nearly constant public eye – from the stages of orchestral performance, to the fields at half time, to the classrooms of hundreds of singing and dancing children – hers was now expressed seated well inside her own domain, either through written word, recorded offering, or framed within the precious teacher-student private music lesson scene. Now, with this new awareness, her potential for passion, anger against injustice, and independent insight finding a new context for both realization and display.

All now rise and rest in the blue glow of radiating technology. Contrived voices and devised apparitions fill the firmament. Gazing up to the sky, she would still ponder the physical universe, within the only dimension currently apprehended, and wonder how it could be that revolving orbs were in place to both describe and influence every thought. Perhaps both thought and intention had a single source, and she were just their open vessel.

What would the Android say, to that?

Time to ask the waning Moon.

.

.

.

.

.

* Margaret Fletcher, unsolicited, confirmed this many years ago. She has since passed.

.

.

Copyright 11/21/24 Ruth Ann Scanzillo All rights those of the author, whose story it is and whose name appears above this line. No copying – in part; whole; or, by translation – permitted without either written request of the author or by blog sharing link. Thank you for maintaining intellectual honorability.

littlebarefeetblog.com

.

.

.

Ebb and Flow.

[formerly titled “Mentality.”]

PhotoOfSouls

For many years, the shroud of mental illness draped our family.

Our father’s mother had been committed, by her brutal husband, to a Massachusetts sanitarium circa 1914. A Sicilian immigrant, she spoke no English and could not defend herself. And, she was pregnant.

Yes.

Dad was born there.

Because sanitariums in those days were not equipped to house young mothers, let alone those deemed unfit, she was not permitted to raise her third child. Along with his sister Dad was first sent to a foster home, where he was regularly beaten over the back of the head with the buckle end of a strap belt, and then to a state institution.

Marvelously, being of sound constitution, he survived – drifting, riding the freight cars, playing his harmonica and bones for loose change and, then, joining the Army – to meet his future wife, on a steam train bound for New York. Years later, as grateful husband and father, he would give God all the credit.

But, our unknown grandmother wasn’t the only figure in the shadowbox.

Mum’s father was a scholar of the Old Testament, a crane builder, and a brooder. We’d never know what mood we’d find, entrenched on the recliner in the corner by the radio. Sometimes a wide, toothless grin, a wisecrack or a belly laugh. Other times, a deep, distant scowl, and scrap envelopes, scattered near the Bible or the stack of National Geographics, emblazoned repeatedly with the bold signature of his name in broad, flat, penknife-sharpened pencil.

Mum inherited a bit of that mercury. She had two faces, so distinct that, had anyone met the one, the other would be unrecognizable.

I learned early on that observing human behavior was not only fascinating, but prudent. I became all too aware that, by watching others, information would come to me continuously, most of it in very great need of being sorted out.

What we called our family was a cinematic display, its camera’s filter missing, of the most transparent aspects of humanity. Beyond dysfunctionality, each member was its cautious and dreaded subject. We never knew when the ball would drop; we only knew that it would.

And, as if to deny the reality, explosive events were often followed by years of avoidance. Being English, Mum’s side of the family called this “holding a grudge.” I remember a Christmas so volatile, so reverberant with screaming and weeping, that the cozy kitchen and grand oak table in the diningroom could hardly contain the scene. That would be the last year, truly, that the whole family would ever convene again. And, I was only eleven years old.

With the stigma of mental illness weighing heavily on the conscience of our society, I now guardedly approach what moves me to disclose. There is a very great need amongst us to identify, primarily because, most of the time, victims cannot do so themselves. Even as physicians are ultimately required to confirm diseases of the body, those who bear up under afflictions of the mind are in even greater need of being found. There are none more lost among us.

The following is a list of traits, hallmarks if you will, that suggest the presence of mental disease. Some are easily recognized, but others may not be. Included are short references to loved ones, by example.

1.) Reaction to Stress.

Those with mental conditions have weaker coping mechanisms than their healthier counterparts. What merely annoys most will sometimes derail the other.  The mentally ill person has a far longer list of stress inducers than the rest of us and, most importantly, is often ready to react to each of them with apparently little power of restraint. My mother spent much of my adolescence alternately sobbing or shrieking; only in the late evening, well after midnight when the house was quiet, would she find solace  – seated alone, at her sewing machine.

2.) Sensory Load.

While some extreme mental states produce catatonia, or an apparent absence of reaction, those with mental disease can often be more easily stimulated, and more ready to respond to stimuli. To them, the world is a maelstrom of desirable and undesirable feelings, and these can often collide over a single incident; sorting through the pleasure and the pain which simultaneously ensues is a task, and may often confound normal counterparts experiencing the same event. Our grandfather would open a family gathering with joyful and exuberant laughter, but a disagreement at the dinner table could send him into a rage that dispersed the family in all directions – to say nothing of the effect on our collective digestion.

3.) Lucidity.

So much is said about the character of a good citizen in various social environments that the trait of honesty, or veracity, seems almost mundane. But, to one who is afflicted, even the best intentions can go awry. Mental disease can cause one to both speak and write things that cannot later be defended; sometimes the language itself is ambiguous, or the content vague, the tone unmistakably that of either anger, bitterness, or undying devotion. One can set out to be the most upstanding and compassionate towards others, but be left with chaff in the wake of a verbal outburst which, long since forgotten, cannot even be recognized or acknowledged. I can recall lengthy, if earnest, handwritten letters from my mother, so convoluted that I hardly had the emotional energy to read them – and, repeated denials:  “I didn’t say that!”

4.) Immediate Gratification.

Everybody likes to get answers to important questions, or receive something nourishing. But, those with mental disease depend on a degree of satisfaction in closure which others find demanding. Furthermore, they become inordinately convinced of the reality of their needs, and wear these convictions as blinders. The unknowns which populate normal, daily landscape can be sources of fixation to one who is burdened, and obtaining what, to others, can easily wait becomes a mission. Dad, especially in his later years, was the most popular member of his neighborhood when it came to solving household problems which, to the rest of the world, were incidental; repeatedly dialing the man up the street, because he couldn’t get the wrapper off of the slice of American cheese, was the story nobody could forget.

Like all syndromes of the human frame, such burdens can have a range of expression. At moments of intense duress or demand, an otherwise healthy person might exhibit traits which could be attributed to one who has a form of disease. This likelihood is intensified if one has been closely exposed to the illness and its manifestations. But, those who are marked by such affliction will fight, on a daily basis, a chronic, inner battle.

There are likely other points which can be made about illnesses of the mind. But, for now, maybe making a mental note to save these in a secure corner of awareness for future reference would be wise. And, most of all, having a quiet conversation with self might help remind us all that we each occupy bodies which are random in their assignment. Only our souls matter, in the end.

Best that we all move through life with a mentality of acceptance, linking our virtual arms with determined commitment to bearing with each other. We are all both strong, and weak, in every way, and it is the convergence of these that both encourages and sustains the ebb and flow of life.

.

.

.

.

© Ruth Ann Scanzillo

9/25/15  All rights those of the author, whose name appears above this line. Sharing by permission to ReBlog, exclusively. Thank you.

littlebarefeetblog.com