relationships


Sigh, definitively not today!

Today I need to  1) finish sorting  my office and file and refile everything depending on where what stuff goes (to Puerto Rico with me, to Daughter, to storage, to waste basket) and 2) take care of my technical dilemmas.

My  digital camera is broken and needs to be replaced or repaired (but the repair is going to cost almost as much as the new camera, soo….), my  laptop works (after being repaired for the second time within a months), but without  important programs, like photo-uploading and  editing. 

About a week ago I found a way of  ”creatively” procrastinating from all this – soo boring! - sorting and packing  by starting a blog, but now I realize I can’t post any pictures to the blog due to technology malfunctions – and talking of places without pictures???? No fun and no fair.

Last Thursday, while waiting for my laptop to be fixed, I spent some time looking at  new laptops and new cameras. I found  both a laptop and a camera I like, but could not buy anyone of them right away, without the diplomatic contredance of  involving family and “family” tech expertise.

Wait till you get to a certain age  and you’ll see that  family members  (especially children in their thirties who lack own children, because they devote their lives to careers requiring both long hours, disregard for holidays, if they clash with business demands,  an extraordinary  amount of time spent traveling – mostly overseas – and an active leisure  involving an abundance of hobbies and a very active social life),  suddenly decide that at your “advanced”  age you must have regressed both physically and  mentally and  need to  be taken care of. 

I usually don’t mind very much, because, in fact, a certain amount  of “being taken care of”   is a refreshing change for someone, who I  – like I -  has been a widow  = solo and totally independent – for over a decade.  It is darn convenient to have someone else  install your programs, repair your stuff,  carry heavy bags of garden soil to your huge second floor balcony/terrace, that you decided to turn into a riot of plants, take you on a cruise, to a spa, invite you to a theatre, opera, symphony, when you are visiting or happen to live nearby, make you buy totally unneeded and “a tad” too young (let’s face it: can women in their fifties wear current “baby doll” style without feeling ridiculous???) clothes and accessories, because “mom you dress as if it still were the ninetees” etc. etc.

But in order to secure future “taking care of mom”  services,  of the desirable variety, I need to be diplomatic.

So I dispatched emails to both Daughter and Ex-son-in-law  of what I think I need, what I think I want and …. the answers – probably technically correct – came with choices of stuff I do not really want: buy an Apple…………… while I wanted an HP – its sleek, has a larger screen that Apple,  the Best Buy people assure me it will competently do everything I want it to do and more ( although, they, too, recommended Apple due to its ease of use : ” I use it in an elementary school” said a Geek Squad guy…  and I am sure he thought that for a “little old lady” it should have been a decisive argument,  since surely I must be intimidated by anything else than an elementary school appropriate technological device, lol), it costs less than Apple and would not require me to learn  a whole bunch of  totally different software at once,  since I have always used a pc.  I know my ex-son-in-law hates Microsoft and Windows, and at present seems to be particularly set against Windows Vista, but….

Ok, let’s take some more rounds of this  diplomatic contredance, while sorting  office and let the blog wait a while longer for pictures.

Yesterday (9/11) my laptop crashed. For the second time in a month, and since last time I lost all data from it – and most of the programs, and busy with moving to Puerto Rico, I barely started uploading everything again, I think it might be time to buy a new one. :-( (

But back to crashes. For most Americans 9/11 is about  crashes into World Trade Center Towers in New York, about crashes of  vastly different ideas of what a desirable civilization, a desirable society is or should be, and about  different ways of trying to impose your idea – and/or will - on everybody else. 

I had my own personal crash of  ideas and wills on September 11…. some 40 years ago.

I was 17 and in seventh heaven, since everything seemed to turn up roses for me that year.  At the beginning of June, even before  I  managed to take my final high school exam  ( In Poland, my home country,we called the final exam”matura” – a symbol of maturity? – and the high school – liceum), I  already went through a grueling week -long entry exam to Polish Film, TV and Theatre Academy in Lodz, Wajda’s, Polanski’s and Skolimowski’s alma mater – to name just a few famous Polish film directors.

Now I was accepted there,  to study film, to become a film director myself in the future. I hardly believed my good luck, since I was  one of only  22 accepted as students that year out of  over 240 candidates!  In addition,  I was  also the youngest (by three years) and the only female! 

No wonder I was proud as a peacock and had a feeling of floating over the earth….  :-) .

I was so totally self-absorbed that I must have missed any and all signals from my boyfriend Jacek  (Jack) of how he felt about the situation.  I accepted as the most natural thing in the world that he proposed marriage ( a day after I got the acceptance letter),  despite the fact that we have only dated since February of that year, that I was only 17 ( he was 20), and about to leave town for at least four years (I lived and he studied in Poznan, while my school to be was in Lodz, 240 km away)  and we got officially engaged on the day of my high school graduation.

My mother let me spend summer vacations with him (after all we were engaged), and we spent one month at the seaside, and another in the Bieszczady mountains, where he was born and his parents lived.  I had a time of my life  and did not pay the slightest  attention  to the fact that all through the summer he made  frequent mentions of  our future marital bliss – hey, I liked him, I liked being with him,  being adored and  having all the sex I wanted without too much restrictions (Poland was a communist country, true, but also a staunchly, conservatively catholic one, and even in the era of  flower children in the West, in Poland premarital sex was not considered acceptable… unless you were engaged to be married, which made the society give you somewhat of a blind eye – and a pretty wide berth),  I loved spending a summer vacation with him and feeling aah, so grown up. But my dreamy next step was to study film directing, not being married, scrambling financially and having to do without a maid – because as students we would not be able to afford one, while  I had neither experience in – or the slightest inclination towards housekeeping, and the thought of possibly having a baby (brrr) caused me considerable nightmares.  So marriage – other than as a years away possibility – had no allure for me.

Yes, I would miss him, I answered his inquiries, but I would be busy learning, experiencing the world I so far only dreamt about, and, anyway, we could see each other  twice a months on weekends, alternating my trips to Poznan  and his to Lodz  (train tickets in Poland at that time were cheap and trains frequent), and he, too, could concentrate on his studies ( he studied engineering and his grades weren’t as stellar as in my opinion they should be, if he truly wanted to be worthy of me… well, yes, I already admitted that at 17 I was not yet a woman, but already  a peacock). He countered that he would try to transfer to a  technical university in Lodz, which was fine with me.  Alas, he did not get a permission to transfer.

September 11 was his namesday (for uninitiated: a birthday of his patron saint or el dia de su santo, which in the catholic Poland  – and not only Poland – was celebrated instead of the person’s own birthday. Please don’t ask me why you would get presents and a party on your poor patron saint’s birthday – I grew up in this culture and never gave it a thought at that time – only now it strikes me as ridiculous).

So Jacek had his namesday party on that September 11 and when he walked me home after the party ( it was communist Poland, we had no cars, nor dared to dream of them – but, influenced by Italian movies we dreamed of scooters, Lambrettas, when we dared to dream big) he suddenly gave me an ultimatum: either I stayed in Poznan (he “generously” offered that I could study visual arts, instead of film directing, since I was studying both visual  and performing arts during  the last three years of high school on a customized  gifted and talented program and did not even have to take entry exams to the Visual Arts Academy in Poznan) and we got married right away or the engagement was off – right there and then.  I was stunned, walked in silence not really believing that he said what he did and waiting for him to recant, to laugh and said it was a – bad – joke. He did not, so finally, in front of my house I asked him if he really meant what he said. He said yes. I took off my engagement ring and gave it to him – and he took it, turned around and left, without a word, a hug, a kiss.

I waited a week, thinking that surely he must come to his senses, he can’t expect me to forgo my exhilarating dream for the sake of something so bland and mundane as a premature marriage, but  he did not call, did not drop by. Nothing.  I was devastated and only the thought of  film school kept me going. So I packed my bags and left for Lodz two weeks before the school started in October.  My first  school ID picture shows not only how very young I was, but also how dreadfully sad.

(a picture to be uploaded)

Yet, with time, the school worked its magic and before I went home to Poznan for Christmas I once again was a happy-go-lucky myself and …. already  had a new boyfriend.  In Poznan, after holidays  I met Jacek when I was visiting my best friend. ( She later admitted that she arranged the meeting on his request). He offered to walk me home and I agreed.  He begged me to forgive him and take him back, offered to wait patiently until I was good and ready to marry him on my terms and  asked me to a New Year’s Eve ball, so that all our friends could see that we were back together again. I was tempted, but  decided  that it would not be fair to my new boyfriend and declined. Jacek called every day hoping he could persuade me, but when my new boyfriend ahowed up on New Year’s Eve and I went to a ball with him, Jacek – as I learned the next day – attempted to commit suicide. He was lucky, though -his roommate returned early from the celebration after a quarrel with his girlfriend, found Jacek and called an ambulance.  I decided not to visit him in the hospital and left  with my new boyfriend to visit his parents instead. 

There are large and tragic crashes - like New York’s 9/11 - and there are small,  tragicomically silly ones – like my personal one all those years ago. …. Yet I still remember it well….. and  a few years after that crash, when I heard about Jacek getting married – I cried all night.