Friday, March 27, 2015
Friday, March 20, 2015
Charybdis ~ A short play
(A woman is sitting on
a bench in a park, staring out blankly at the audience. She's clean and well
dressed, holding a purse on her lap. She is waiting for someone. She looks at
her watch. A young man enters and sits next to her. He's unshaven, in shabby
clothes.)
SON
Hey, Mom! I've been looking for you.
MOTHER
I've been waiting right here.
SON
Well, I'm glad I finally found you. Are you hungry? Do you
want to go get a sandwich?
MOTHER
Sure. I guess we could do that.
SON
Let's go. I'm starving.
MOTHER
Why haven't you eaten?
SON
I don't have any money.
MOTHER
What happened to your money?
SON
I spent it on other things.
MOTHER
What kind of things?
SON
Oh, you know. The usual.
MOTHER
(looks away, then down
at her feet; seems surprised by something she sees there and lifts her feet a
little off the floor)
The water is rising.
SON
What water? I don't see anything.
MOTHER
My shoes are getting wet.
SON
What are you talking about? There isn't any water! C'mon,
let's go get a sandwich or a piece of pizza. I'm starving to death!
MOTHER
(gives him an
appraising look) Yes, you do look
like you're starving. You look like a skeleton. Why are you are ruining the
good looks that God gave you? You got a great gift of beauty and you're
throwing it away for no reason!
SON
Mom, no. Not this.
MOTHER
Not what?
SON
Not this big load of bullshit.
MOTHER
(Sighs dramatically.
Looks away, then takes a hand towel out of her purse and starts drying off her shoes.)
SON
(watches her
skeptically for a moment before continuing)
There's a reason.
MOTHER
A reason for what, Son?
SON
It’s because I'm suffering.
MOTHER
What?
SON
I'm suffering because you never loved me.
MOTHER
(Sits up straight and
looks at him)
How can you say that? I've always loved you! I love you more
than my own self!
SON
That's what you say.
MOTHER
I gave you everything--everything I had. I rack my brains
every night about how I can help you!
SON
And then you don't do it.
MOTHER
I'm trying!
SON
No you aren't. You're not even getting me a sandwich. You're
just sitting there polishing your shoes.
MOTHER
I’m not polishing my shoes! Forget about the fucking
sandwich! Listen to me! The water is rising. It's already past my ankles!
SON
I don't see any water.
MOTHER
It's almost up to my knees!
SON
(nonchalant) Whatever.
I'm not really hungry anyway. After you go a day or two without eating, your
stomach forgets.
MOM
A day or two? Jesus! No wonder you’re so skinny! Okay, let’s
go get a piece of pizza.
SON
No. Forget about it. That's not my problem. I’m suffering
because Joanna left me.
MOTHER
Joanna? Son! That
was 2 years ago! That's not a good reason to starve yourself.
SON
I think it is.
MOTHER
So you're feeling lonesome? Guess what? So am I. I miss you
so much. Why don’t you come back to your senses?
SON
(annoyed) How can
you miss me when I'm sitting right in front of you?
MOTHER
But I never see you! I don’t know where you are! Every
night, I worry that you're freezing to death under some overpass. Why don't you
ever answer your phone?
SON
I lost it.
MOTHER
Again?! I just bought that last month. How could you lose
another phone?
SON
The same way everybody loses things! I put it down and
forgot to pick it up!
MOTHER
(taps the top of her
purse and looks away again)
Have you seen your doctor lately?
SON
You’re not allowed to ask me that.
MOTHER
When is your next appointment?
SON
I don't know. Maybe next week.
MOTHER
Are you taking your medication?
SON
You’re not allowed to ask about that, Mom, remember?
MOTHER
But are you?
SON
What do you want me to say? Yes?
MOTHER
(Sighs. Taps her
purse.)
You smell like you need a shower.
SON
I’m sure I do.
MOTHER
Why don't you take one at the shelter?
SON
They kicked me out.
MOTHER
What?! When did
that happen? What did you do?
SON
I don't know. It was crazy. They said they couldn't wake me
up.
MOTHER
Why couldn't they wake you? Were you on drugs?
SON
No.
MOTHER
Why wouldn't you wake up, then?
SON
I don't know. I guess I was tired.
MOTHER
How can you be tired when you don't do anything all day?
SON
What do you know about it!? I spend all day walking from
place to place, just looking for somewhere to sit down. It's exhausting! It took
me three hours just to get here on the bus to meet you!
MOTHER
(penitant)
Where are you going to sleep tonight?
SON
I don't know. I was thinking maybe I could spend the night
on your couch. What do you think? I just need a place to lie down for a few
hours...
MOTHER
I don't think I can let you do that...
SON
Why not?
MOTHER
Because something always goes wrong when I do. Remember the
last time?
SON
It's Dad, isn't it? You won't let me sleep over because Dad
says no.
MOTHER
You need to check into a hospital, Son, or a drug treatment
program. Those are your options. We don't want to enable you to go on living
like this.
SON
Why don't you think for yourself for a change? It's
pathetic.
MOTHER
I am thinking for
myself. I agree with Dad. This isn't working. It's not right. You're in danger.
(putting her hand out to touch his jaw)
Why is your mouth swollen? Did somebody hit you?
SON
(pulling away from
her) Yes. But it didn't hurt. I was smiling the whole time.
(giving her a strange smile)
Don't worry about it! Everything will be fine as soon as my loan comes
through.
MOTHER
Your loan?
SON
The $50,000 government transparency loan I told you about.
Damien is going to co-sign for me.
MOTHER
No one is going to loan you $50,000! And if someone said
they would co-sign for you, they're lying. They’re probably trying to get their
hands on your disability money--to rip you off.
SON
What do you know about it!
MOTHER
I know you aren't being realistic. I know you need help.
SON
Then why don't you help me?! I stink! My feet hurt! I'm
cold! I'm hungry! You're sitting there with a purse full of money and you won't
even buy me a sandwich!
MOTHER
But I WILL buy you a sandwich! Come on. Let's go get one right
now.
SON
No. Wait. That's not really the problem. I'm suffering
because I don't understand what's going on.
MOTHER
(suddenly alert)
What?
SON
I'm think I’m sinking into the water, Mom. I'm slipping
under the surface.
MOTHER
Please don't say that.
SON
It's scary, but I kind of like it. The water is warm. It
protects me from falling. It cushions me from the blow.
MOTHER
No, it doesn't.
SON
I can see a grate at the bottom of the pool, creating a
current. It's pulling at me. It's sucking me in.
MOTHER
Don't go towards the grate! It's a trap! Swim up! Swim up to
the top!
SON
I can see the sun penetrating the water, and little
particles of dust floating beside me in the light; I can see your shadow
standing at the edge of the pool, peering in...
MOTHER
(takes a sharp breath)
I can just barely see you. And the water is rising. Now it's
covering my shoes. I'm looking around for a rope...
SON
A rope?
MOTHER
I want to throw it to you. I want to pull you out of the
water.
SON
Do you have one?
MOTHER
I can't find one. I'm still looking.
SON
You are?
MOM
Come on, Son. Let's go get a sandwich.
SON
(getting up and
starting to walk around the bench in a widening spiral)
Forget it. I changed my mind. I don't want anything from
you.
MOTHER
What? Why? What did I do?
(Following after him. The spiral getting wider and wider until she chases him
off the stage; Each time she passes behind the bench, she emerges wetter and
wetter.)
SON
Don’t pretend you don’t know.
MOTHER
Slow down! Where are you going?
SON
What do you care?
MOTHER
Don't you want a sandwich?
SON
Not anymore.
MOTHER
(Looking around
anxiously, perhaps for the rope) But you said you were hungry! Come on, let
me buy you a sandwich!
SON
I'd rather have a beer.
MOTHER
I'm not buying you any alcohol!
SON
(stooping to pick up a
cigarette butt off the sidewalk and holding it up to admire in the light) Look
at the size of that one!
MOTHER
Don't put that in your mouth! It's dirty.
SON
Stop pretending you care about me.
MOTHER
Stop running away from me!
SON
Stop following me! Go find the fucking rope!
(exits)
MOTHER
Wait up! Come back! Don't leave me! (stops at the edge of the stage, reaching after him; the next line is
delivered quietly, in defeat) I could buy you some cigarettes...
(walks back to the
bench; sits down carefully; looks down at the ground, then lifts her feet up on
the bench to avoid the rising water; settles the purse on her lap; resumes
staring blankly out at the audience)
THE END
TIP JAR: Want to express your appreciation? Leave a review on Amazon, here, or just search for the title and click on it when you find it to move it up in the search rankings.
P.C. Fergusson is a writer based in San Francisco. See what she’s working on now at northbeachnotebook.blogspot.com. Find more of her work on her Amazon Author Page.
Copyright 2014. All rights reserved.
Cover art is a collage of images found on the Internet.
Friday, March 13, 2015
What You See When the Fog Lifts
When Ace suggested moving back to San Francisco after 20 years plus in the suburbs, I was afraid. And the first night I spent in our rented flat in North Beach, I cried. I felt disconnected from my children, from the comfortable home where they grew up. I could hear the people in the flat next door, walking up and down their hallway. I wasn't sure of my boundaries. Who was I supposed to become?
But just a few days later, the fog lifted: No one knew me. No one watched me. No one judged me in the City. That awful crush of conformity that permeated my life in suburbia was gone. I was free to be anything--everything--I wanted. I was free!
Now we're coming up on our fourth year in San Francisco, and I don't ever want to go back. I want to claim San Francisco as my own, to take her in my arms and devour her, in all her lush and sere and dark deliciousness. She is mine, this city where we met and married, where my grandmother, my mother, and my three children were born. She is mine for the taking.
~At an Easter bonnet contest in Golden Gate Park.
Monday, March 9, 2015
The Cold and Necessary Bay
When I took this picture I saw the line of light above the hills, god trailing her finger over all her creation.
Now on my computer I see mostly the bridge, masterwork of human endeavor, with its big bolts, and thick grease, and heavy ironwork.
In between them lies the water, cold and deep and ever changing, full of strange and dangerous life, a gorgeous and terrifying mystery, connecting man and god.
~Walking southward towards the City on the GGB.
Friday, March 6, 2015
On Angel Island
I've been searching through my photographs for images of San Francisco and environs. So many of my photos have been lost, so many misplaced.
Back in the day, I was a photographer in college, and Ace and I would make out in a darkroom at San Francisco State University, where we met and started the courtship that would become this marriage of 30 plus years. I was young and confident in my beauty back then, but the red light in the darkroom made me more beautiful, made him look like a dream, and the acrid smell of the chemicals made that dumpy room cramped with equipment seem dangerous and erotic. We hurried back to taste its pleasures week after week.
I used a Leica then, a camera so magical it cast a spell of admiration when I entered the newsroom of the Golden Gater with it slung over my shoulder. I miss the weight of that Leica in my hand, the feel of the lens between my fingers as I spun it back and forth, bringing the two images together in the viewfinder to focus the photo, seeing that my world was in sync.
Now that the world is digital, I take photo after photo on my iphone and never print them out. They cluster on my laptop, until my laptop dies and is replaced; or stack up on an online site, until it goes out of business, warning me politely to rescue my photos before it's too late; or they sit snugly on a firewire storage device, until technology passes me by once again, and the firewire input goes missing.
My photos are like confused salmon, swimming around in the ether, unsure of the way back home. Except for this one--a beauty. It found me, at last, gills glittering in the sun.
~A friend on Angel Island.
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