Archive | December, 2018

A New Year’s Poem: ‘Not a Happy Ending’

29 Dec

The beginning of each new year is a time for personal reflection, which is why many people resolve to change their everyday lives in some manner.  Some go on diets.  Other attempt to quit smoking or whatever they think they need to improve on.

While flying to Los Angeles from Bucharest, I watched a documentary on Roger Ebert, the film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times.  I had this refrain in my head: We are our own worse enemies.  Like stream of consciousness, I remembered other occasions of me repeating the refrain.  The poem streamed out without needing much editing.

What follows is my attempt to force people to be a little self-reflective now.

It’s a modern poem, meaning there’s no end rhyme and the only echo are words.


 

We are our own worse enemy.

Some of us eat too much.

Some eat too much red meat.

Some get high on drugs.

Some smoke cigarettes.

Some drink too much and others don’t exercise.

Some almost drank themselves to death, like Roger Ebert, Jack London and Raymond Carver.

Carver quit drinking, smoked like a chimney and died of lung cancer.

Yes, we are our own worse enemy.

The Atheist Who Loved Christmas Eve

22 Dec

If it wasn’t for my aunt Sylvia, the wife of my mother’s brother and my first cousin Wendy, their daughter, my Christmas Eve memories would be much colder and bleaker, or worse nonexistent.  These two women organized the Christmas Eve parties I have fond memories of.

As a child, as long as I could remember my Christmas Eves were always the same.  My father would drive my mother, my brother, sister, and me to somewhere behind the Santa Monica Airport in Los Angeles, where my aunt and uncle’s family lived.

I remember walking the short distance from my parents’ car to my aunt and uncle’s home and feeling the dank air.  Entering their home was always a pleasure, feeling the coziness of their home on Christmas Eve.  Usually a 6-foot or taller Christmas tree, decorated in white or sometimes red, would grace one corner of the living room.  Under the tree, were numerous gifts for my aunt’s immediate family and small gifts for my brother, sister and me.  A fire would be burning in the fireplace.  Sometimes for what seemed like minutes, I would stare at the flames flickering.  I could smell the burning wood and scent of the tree.

The routine was always the same.  Sooner or later after arriving, the two families would eat dinner together, segregated—the adults at one table and the children at theirs.  Six children, three from my family and the three of my aunt and uncle, ate.  Wendy was my aunt and uncle’s middle child.

After dinner, youngest children got the honor of distributing the gifts to the people in the room.  Then the gifts were opened, in reverse order by age.  After the gifts were opened, the families entertained themselves with parlor games or reminiscing or my two female cousins would attempt to entertain by singing and dancing, with catcalls from the young males, particularly me.  My sister recently told me she remembers our aunt dressing up, wearing an ugly Santa Claus mask and chasing the youngsters around the house.

I attended these gatherings through high school–after high school, much less frequently.   Many years passed.  My father died; my mother, my aunt and uncle, my sister and her husband, and my cousin Wendy and her husband moved to Nevada.

By then, my cousin Wendy was teaching and had the responsibility of organizing the Christmas Eve parties.  After many years, My wife Marlene and I attended a couple more.

Wendy knew how to entertain and could match my quick wit.  Two favorite things of hers were giving gag gifts and singing karaoke.  Some of the gag gifts were re-gifted over and over.  I appreciated her low-brow humor.  Once somehow I got a gift of a toy brown cow that dispensed chocolate candy out of its rectum.  Then there was the karaoke.  My cousin made sure everyone participated in the karaoke round.  It was great fun.

My aunt and uncle lived until they were in their 90s.  They died seven years ago.  Then, my cousin died four years later.  Now I only have those memories of Christmas Eve.

Oh, I forgot.  My parents were Ashkenazi Jews.  My uncle called himself an agnostic and I’m the atheist.

I first wrote this personal essay for a journalism class I had at Long Beach City College.  I published it two years ago on my blog.  I’m republishing again this Christmas in remembrance of my first cousin, Wendy Gross-Aeillo.

Barry Saks may be reached at barry@barrysaks.com.

 

Long Beach City Council Passes Motion to Fund Immigration Legal Services for the Undocumented

4 Dec

The Long Beach City Council on Tuesday, Dec. 4, passed a motion to establish the Long Beach Justice Fund, which will be set at $250,000 and administered by the Vera Institute of Justice.

In favor were 1st District Councilwoman Lena Gonzalez, 2nd District Councilwoman Jeanine Pearce, 6th District Councilman Dee Andrews, 7th District Councilman Roberto Uranga, 8th District Councilman Al Austin and Vice Mayor and 9th District Councilman Rex Richardson.

Opposed were 3rd District Councilwoman Suzie Price, 4th District Councilman Daryl Supernaw and 5th District Councilwoman Stacy Mungo.  The three council members who voted against the motion said during the discussion in principle they supported establishing the fund, however, each voted against the motion for different reasons.

The fund will be used to pay for immigration legal services for resident and people working in Long Beach, who earn less than 200 percent of federal poverty level.