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A Lump in My Throat Named Rose

1/3/2025

 
Rose Marie and I were sophomores together. She was scary-smart and well-informed. (Hell we were all smart. Before Affirmative Action, Pomona kept us out because we were black, not because we were stupid.) Like me, Rose was a high yellow girl, about my height, Afro about as wild as mine. I remember she was knock-kneed and pigeon toed, a combination that caused her to galumph through the dorm like a colt taking its first steps.

She spoke … well, shrieked … in a high-pitched register. I can hear it now as if she were standing next to me. (I wish you were standing here, Rose, I miss you.) She spouted history, philosophy, and gossip like she was delivering a lecture. A very loud lecture. Her thoughts barreled into one another, too fast to find their balance, too slow to get out of the way. Explanatory phrases careened to a premature halt. Maniacal laughter showed up, when words went missing.

She was provocative, stomped up and down the dorm hallway, twirling her underpants over her head. I didn’t have the impression she sought attention. I had the impression she was declaring her independence from common standards of decorum. She would never fit in, so fuck it. I loved her for that.

I would never fit in, either, but I could never say fuck it.

We, her friends—if you could call our relationship that—wrestled her back into her room, before the dorm authorities could snatch her. We stood guard until daylight. We had to go to class and hoped her demons had exhausted her enough to keep her out of trouble.

She wasn’t scared of anything, or maybe she was, underneath her bravado. What did I know? Indeed, she’d be the first to tell you, I did not know. “Darlin’ you have no idea—,” She informed me once or three times. No idea about her life. No idea about life in general, because I was … I try to pull up her words. Innocent? Naïve? Sheltered?

She was right. When she spoke the truth about me, delivering the information without a hint of judgment, I recognized myself. She spoke me into existence. I loved her for that.

She said I’d be shocked if I knew how she lived when she disappeared from campus for days at a time. She implied that she belonged to a pimp and made no secret she was taking some illegal drug or another.
When she returned after a disappearance, she’d sneak back in after curfew, through the window of a friend who lived on the first floor.

Only three or four of us were close to Rose, in proximity anyway, if not emotionally. She was hard to take, alright, but didn’t direct her crazy at anybody. Neither did she seek out companionship. I don’t remember Rose at rest. I don’t remember having a conversation with her. You didn’t converse with a nonstop screech. You could only listen and then hear that screech involuntarily, after you tired of paying attention. She was simply part of our little group, part of me. She was a lost soul. I loved her for that.

I was a lost soul, too, but couldn’t scream for help.

We—four black girls and a white boy with a van—drove Rose to a hospital in L. A. We corraled her into the van, where she held forth for the forty-five minute trip, and we kept ducking her demonstrative arms. On the way, a crow slammed into the windshield. We took it as a bad omen.

The woman at the admissions desk looked at us with a bored expression, as in what’s-your-story-on-this-typical-night-in-the-E.R. After all, none of us were bleeding. We’re afraid our roommate will end up getting hurt on the street. She hasn’t slept forever. Or eaten. Can we check her in? No we don’t know what she’s taken. No we don’t know what’s wrong with her.

We only knew the pain of watching a loved one spiral into chaos. The hospital wouldn’t admit Rose, because we weren’t responsible parties. None of us were her family, and all of us were under age.

I don’t know where we took her after that, don’t know where she took herself. She didn’t make it to senior year.

Today, there’s a lump in my throat named Rose Marie.

Damn Fine Sentence #89

12/31/2024

 
While I’m reading, a sentence will grab me and force me to stop. I pay tribute to other authors by sharing their Damn Fine Sentences with you. Then I recount a memory the words bring up for me. It’s about how books connect with your life.

“You could hear in her voice her house was paid off.”

———Shannon Sanders

——--Company

Excited to showcase her city’s reputation for fine cuisine, my Chicago pal led me through the Magnificent Mile restaurant’s carved oaken doors. Carpeted steps led down to the dining room. I tripped on the bottom stair. Blazing white linens put me on alert. Deep inside my purse, my credit card squealed.

A tuxedo-clad server glided over. He set gold embossed menus in front ot us. “What can I bring you to drink?”

I opened the menu, which listed no prices. “I just want water, thanks.”

“We have … Perrier … ?”

I didn’t know water had a first name.

“San Pellegrino …?”

Was this Perrier’s cousin? I shifted my attention from the menu to his face.

He raised an eyebrow.. “Evian …?”

I raised an eyebrow.

He gazed at the door. “Poland Spring…?”

I waited.

He sighed. “And …” He looked down his long thin nose at me. He pooched his lips. “Tap.”

I pooched back. “Tap,” I said.

Dear Tuesday

12/13/2024

 
Dear Tuesday,

You’re a slacker in a Type A world. I admire that.

You remind me there’s always time to answer that urgent email tomorrow, or the next day, or the next—and still get it done this week. The library book that’s due on Friday can sit on the kitchen counter all day. The chicken breast I intended to bake on Sunday? There’s still plenty of time before it turns green. Tuesday, your optimism inspires me.

I applaud your low expectations and lack of ambition. You exert none of that weekend pressure on me to spend a fab evening in the arts district. Or get together with people who get together. Or go see the hot new movie they’re talking about. Nobody’s going—it’s Tuesday.

On Tuesday, there’s a drawer full of clean underwear, because laundry day is Monday.

Not that I need clean clothes for you—you’re all about pajamas. You’re my favorite for watching paint dry, while daydreaming about the things I’ll accomplish by the weekend. My future is bright. You’ve never scolded me for the way my week turned out.

Thanks for being you, Tuesday. Never nagging me to hurry up. If I neglect my writing chores, you say, “No problem, finish up tomorrow.” If I hunker down and write for four hours you say, “Girl, you’re ahead of schedule. Take the rest of the week off. ”

The best present you give me is Tuesday night yoga class. And if I can’t get there because I didn’t get out of bed, and besides my gas tank is on E, since I put off buying gas again—the same yoga class is repeated on Thursday night. It’s so Tuesday of you to give me a redo.

You’re a win-win situation.

Love,
Your Biggest Fan

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