Money, Mayhem, Madness

Someday I will retire. Ah, but how does one retire when one hasn’t been employed for pay outside of one’s home for a longish time, eh? How, to be more to the point, does one retire when one hasn’t been productive or purposeful or a contributing member of society?graphite drawingThe very idea is preposterous. Crazy, really. But let’s be clear here: I wasn’t really that impressive and significant a member of the workforce when I was under contract to my various outside employers. Heck, some of them might conceivably have wished to put out a contract on me. But I digress. The thing is that this idea of retirement stems not entirely from my personal lack of a job-related work ethic (a.k.a. lazypantsitude) nor even, strictly speaking, from the retirement-contemplation infection I may or may not have caught from any of those near and dear to me, who may or may not include close friends and family members–it’s simply that Issue that so many people begin to contemplate with a bit of trepidation nowadays when the world of personal finance is so volatile and the future as unpredictable as it could possibly seem. It’s the persistent and slightly frightening specter of what will become of me, of any of us, when we opt out of the workaday world entirely and attempt to live a post-employment life. Retirement, as (or if) experienced nowadays, is a mighty scary mistress, sweet as sticky toffee pudding one minute and in the very next one, raving like a latecomer to the sale at Filene’s Basement.graphite drawingYou will not be the least bit surprised that, no matter how modest and unconventional my work life has been, I am enamored enough of non-work-related occupations to desire the life of a retiree if (and when) I can lay my hands on it. So I consider, now, what it will really require in the way of planning and saving and earning and arranging between now and that magical date, whenever it may be, and am plotting a course through the intervening period that I hope will set me and my beloved up as well as can be for that eventuality. If any billionaires should happen to be reading this and simply itching to offload some of their excess samoleans into my personal coffers, of course I am willing to shoulder that happy responsibility. If anyone should be looking for some fantastic artworks to purchase for home, office, gift or birdcage-liner, I have stacks of material available for the buying. But I suspect it will take some other, further, additional and/or different approaches to actually put me in a reasonable position to retire.graphite drawingDon’t mind me, in the meantime, wigging out just a mite over the whole process. It’s how I handle mysteries and challenges. And yes, I am very well aware that worry about such a thing as retirement is entirely a rich person’s problem and thus not exactly worthy of much sympathy.  Still, I do fuss over it a bit. Since I don’t have regular skills that have kept me gainfully employed (and even when I was employed, it was mostly in academia and selling art, so you can guess how gainful that all was), I shall just have to take my own tack, no matter how tangential it is to the norm. That is definitely how I tend to operate, and I can’t imagine that my life as a retiree will be any different in that regard.

 

Hot Flash Fiction 3

graphite drawingA Menopausal Mini-Mystery

‘OutRRRRRageous!’ she purred, ‘I’m only a lady who has fallen prey to the sentimental desires of A Certain Age to visit my old acquaintance!’ Still, her counter-suit of police Profiling would have been more plausible if she hadn’t been spotted in that location and in such a compromising position. The acquaintance in question, quivering in the doorway behind Madame De Léopard, was still squeaking with shrill accusation as the neighbors began to gather and fling catty remarks back and forth like batted feather lures. When the arresting officer demanded a sobriety test and detected that an illegal quantity of West Country Farmhouse Cheddar had been dabbed behind the lady’s ears, pandemonium erupted and many of the surrounding crowd were convinced that there was a far more nefarious explanation for her appearance on the scene than middle-aged maundering.

Thoughtless Thursday

Since a number of Web Wanderers post wonderful Wordless Wednesday items, and I’m always behind the times in oh-so-many ways, I’m posting my own version a day late (and undoubtedly a dollar short), giving you here a highly abbreviated visual history of my life as an artist. Since I’m only middle-aged, I let it end at the Middle Ages for now, though you’ll notice from some of the costumes in the last frame that I’m looking for a Renaissance to appear fairly soon. Can’t hurt to hope, can it?

P&I

I was no prodigy, and I certainly took an early interest in shortcuts and easy techniques when it came to making images, but I did always have an eye for a good juicy and dramatic storyline . . . P&IAs I grew more seriously interested in art, I was also reaching an age where one wants to Fit In, so I did my part of stylizing my imagery and making it seem, I thought, more palatable to the critics (teachers, relatives) . . .P&IThen, of course, there was that awkward age when I started to think for myself, to develop my own philosophy of what my art should or could be, and what I wanted it to be. Presumably, the reason I lost my reason entirely. You just can’t make your own art without giving up at least a little of your already tenuous hold on reality . . .P&I. . . and here you find me, wandering from village to village in the vast land of Internet, telling my tales and making my pictures without much regard for the safety and comfort of those around me, but perhaps in that most of all being at last quite true to myself, the mildly crazed artist in your midst . . .

BOING! “Hi, Old People!” BOING!

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Never mind keeping an eye on the little ones, who's watching out for the geezers?

The neighbor kids, that’s who. They’re the ones that always know what’s happening with the ancient people next door. I know because I’m just the pseudo-grownup version of one of those little squirts. I was the one that went over to the big tall wood fence on Ryan Street when I knew Mrs Pipkin was gardening because I could see the top of our dear neighbor’s head from my shrimpy P.O.V., and piped, “Pickens, my mommy says I can play with you!” I can’t confirm at this great remove that I’d actually received such permission, especially given that I suspect, more accurately, that I was approaching my add-on grandma of my own volition–she having proven endlessly patient in answering my blue-sky questions and letting me trail around after her like a little bit of leftover Christmas ribbon.

Let’s face it: children are insightful whether you want them to be or not, and especially adept at providing their deepest insights at the most inconvenient moment possible. Which is decidedly the most entertaining as well as the most hideously dangerous aspect of spending time with persons of the childish persuasion. Witness the uncanny gift mini-people have for repeating, verbatim but utterly out of context, horrendously revealing things that their elders have previously uttered within the hearing of said small persons. There is simply no antidote for having been indiscreet around toddlers and their ilk. Part and parcel of this talent is they are marvelously gifted at cutting through the cauliflower and getting down to gritty reality in record time.

A friend and colleague once related an excellent tale of such insightful youthful efficiency, regarding a long-ago episode one of his cohorts experienced while teaching in the deep south during the era of Civil Rights‘ supposed birth. A Concerned Parent had contacted the school board with a complaint that friend Mr Krapelski was behaving in a fashion incompatible with the intents and aims of the whole Civil Rights concept, and the board felt the complaint warranted a full inquiry. Hurray for the Board; I imagine this sort of follow-through was fairly rare at the time. The approach was simple and obvious enough. Talk to the kids. So the inspectors, amazingly, did. Somebody did recognize the power of children’s keen observation.

They approached the situation with simplicity and no pre-arranged outcomes dependent on ulterior motives, and they posed the obvious questions to the class: “Does Mr Krapelski treat any of you children differently than others? Is Mr Krapelski prejudiced?” And their answer was equally simple and untainted. A pert little fellow raised his hand immediately. “No, sir, he ain’t prejudiced. He hates us all equal!”

I, though a childless person, am well equipped with nine brilliant nephews and one equally dazzling niece, all of whom in their time have provided rich stores of intelligent interpretations of the universe and its workings, from understanding the threat of the backyard swing that ‘threw’ Grandma when she stuck her toe too firmly in the ground under it (“Mormor, det er farlig!” [“Grandma, that’s dangerous!“]) to telling wildly indecipherable stories that despite their incoherence become clear (and hilarious) by way of outsized pantomime and garbled, gagging narration (the best one was about–you won’t be surprised–a gigantic sneeze followed by an even bigger booger).

They taught me about instinctively genius juniors knowing just how to make it possible for Mormor to get back up the long steep hill from the beach if she wanted to walk down there with the family after her back had gone bad (let Tristan, the beautiful husky dog, tow her back up while she held his leash–which he did briskly and without batting a pale blue eye) to why the same grandma should act as Home Base in a closely contested game of Hide-and-Seek (“because she’s the oldest thing in the house!”).

This latter is precisely the appeal of childlike clarity and bluntness, in my book: they recognize that all of us over about the age of twenty are unspeakably, unreachably, unimaginably distant in the mists of antiquity–yet this has a certain cachet with young kids: unlike, say, their teenage counterparts, they admire and respect this very strange quality of Oldness. It’s really weird, and thus somehow kind of piquant and beguiling.

My husband and I thought of ourselves as only moderately advanced in age when we were in the early fifties and just moseying into the forties, respectively. The neighboring kids put that right into perspective. They lived in the house across the fence from our apartment garage, and the young sprats spent a great deal of their spare time and energy bounding around on the trampoline next to that back fence. We could hear them flouncing and giggling almost ceaselessly–enough, perhaps, on its own to make us feel our age a little more keenly–and then one day we paused for a moment when we’d gone out to get in the car.

BOING! The neighbor kids heard our talking, through the fence. They jumped a little harder so they could clear the top of the fence and get a better look over our way. We heard them cackling and turned around. BOINGGG! We grinned. BOINGBOINGBOING!!! The biggest of the kids waved madly and yelled, “Hi, Old People!” And they collapsed on the trampoline, laughing their curly heads off, while we fell about in equal hilarity as we stumbled into the car. That was all the encounter required. Acclamation and affirmation–of childhood silliness, of punctured pompous pretend-adulthood, and of the joy of being whatever age one is, as long as it’s not taken too seriously. Can’t help but rebound from such commentary a lot higher than we were leaping just a little bit before.

Hurray for unfiltered youth! Hurray for the goofiness of happy aging! Getting old, after all, surely does beat the alternative. Especially when there are some junior wildlings handy to keep everything somewhat in perspective.

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<BOING!>

Looking for My Inner Tough Guy

Glass-painted self portrait

When under pressure, when filled with self-doubt, when looking for answers to questions yet unknown . . .

I’ve embarked on yet another new adventure. Not at all sure how I feel about this one, because it’ll draw on skills and strengths I’m not certain I have, at a time in life when others are unlikely to see them any clearer than I can.

That’s right, I’m a middle-aged artist about to go job-hunting again. Haven’t done that in a couple of decades. Not sure that what I’ve done in those long-ago days even counts as real job searching, since each time it was necessary for me to seek work it tended to find me before I had to struggle extensively with what I understood to be the normal process of job hunting. Do I have marketable skills? God knows. Are people with job openings going to take a chance on hiring and training me, despite the fear of a short shelf life that might be instilled by my [beautiful, and well-earned] grey hairs? Me, I plan to live a long and action-figure-like adventure well into the unforeseeable future. But I sure don’t know what form of employment that will involve.

I certainly didn’t foresee the various paths on which my previous lives have led me. I’m delighted with where they all crossed and converged to land me at this point in life. So perhaps I have unreasonably high hopes that I’ll hit the jackpot yet one more time. I’m funny like that. Never mind that I haven’t had paying work that I really loved–at least, that I thought loved me back–in most of my adult life. I’m thinking I’m due. But I’m chock-full of that malarkey too. Given how insanely generous the universe has been to me thus far without any particular regard for purpose or logic, I’m planning on yet another dose of unearned magical wonders to be showered upon me. Hear that, yoo-nee-verse??? I’m up against it, and looking forward to being bailed out by fun and miraculous happenings big enough to surf me right along into far-off retirement.