Finding Normalcy (also my biggest fangirly moment with Joshua Bell)

I've been living where I am for 2 years on February 1.  The timing was very intentional:  Joshua Bell was playing the Kennedy Center on February 11th.  I was still married until February 27th and I didn't want to go see my favorite violinist with a guy who was on his way out the door. I didn't want to have to come home and put on my game-face after such a wonderful evening. So I moved.

The first year was like a jon boat at sea; sometimes the waters were calm, but in all cases the sides of the boat are unnervingly low and it's difficult to find faith in that flat bottom. I mean, even the Titanic sank, right?  After the one year mark I felt more confident, like getting out of the boat and hiking up into the trees. The idea has been, I think, to enter the jungle alone.  Sometimes I feel like I'm back in the boat, sailing for the New World with no shore on the horizon.

For as long as I've lived in Tiny Cottage, the oven hasn't functioned properly.  I never got over being a home-owner and I'm used to fixing things myself, but I'm proud to say I didn't disassemble the stove to find out why the oven didn't heat. Finally, over drinks and Halloween candy, I told the landlords the oven wasn't working. They figured it was best to just replace the whole appliance; I said it wasn't any bother, and the conversation turned to other things.

This last Saturday morning a guy came out early and put in the new stove.  And then the guy said:
"Small problem. Do you have any batteries?" My new gas stove has an intermittent electric pilot light system. I found 4 AAs, but my new stove needed 8. The guy's wife was willing to go to the store and get more, but he said he was content (and so was I) to show me where the batteries go. We called it a morning. 

After book club I went to Aldi for batteries but they didn't have any AAs. Aldi is next to the pool hall.  The pool hall didn't have batteries for me, either (I asked.) I asked the bartender to charge my phone, played Chicago vs. Delta blues on the  jukebox with Dave, and ate snacks with a new friend who insisted I try the pizza dumplings. They're awesome.

I stopped at Giant for batteries on the way home (the bartender hates Giant, he says vehemently.) I parked my car and then remembered my cell phone charging behind the bar.  Back at the pool hall, I stood next to the cash register, waiting for the bartender.  Oh, look -  a basket of remotes sitting right there. I was rifling through them looking for AA instead of AAA when the bartender snatched the basket away from me and handed over my phone. I went back to Giant to buy the batteries and some pop-up cinnamon rolls.

And that's what I'm doing right now - eating cinnamon rolls I made in the oven that works because I spoke up to the right person.  It's a small but significant success. Maybe I can make a habit of this, with a turnaround time faster than 2 years. Baby steps.

I shook hands with Josh Bell at the Kennedy Center, and it's because I embrace my neurosis:  I can't stay sitting at a concert.  I have to get  up and stand back against the wall.  Wall-people are a thing; if you already know then you are one, and I salute you.  Eventually I was just overwhelmed with emotion and had to go outside.  You can't go back inside while the concert is in session, but there's a nice TV on the wall and some rows of chairs, so I stood there in the Introvert Section and watched until the end.  I was trying to be the first person to leave when a man motioned toward a velvet rope cordoning off a queue.

"Stand there if you want an autograph."

There was only ONE FAMILY in the line.  I was freaking out.  This could actually work for me: meet Josh Bell and get an autograph, talk to very few people, not queue for an hour, and still leave before traffic got crazy. So I did that.

I had only the playbill for Mr. Bell to sign, but he signed it, and I told him what matters most to me:

"Thank you for the Kreisler Album."

His eyes opened a little, and he smiled and shook my hand.  He said that project meant a lot to him, too.  My heart was dying - I hope one day to be in a position where someone tells me my love-labor was appreciated.

And then an usher motioned to another cordon:

"Stand there for the picture." THE PICTURE. Shit. Now I had to decide. I would have to wait in line for all the other autographs to be signed, but I was still only second in line. The family in front of me was very nice so I decided to stick it out.  And I am totally deer-in-the-headlights in this picture.




Celebrate your small successes, even if it was awkward achieving them. 
Also, make some cinnamon rolls.

Buy The Album:
The Kreisler Album: Joshua Bell Plays Music by Fritz Kreisler
Praeludium and Allegro is so heartbreakingly beautiful - I actually found a young violinist willing to play it at my daughter's wedding for $100 but she cut me off with a "MOM, NO."  I should have done it. What's the use of having kids if you don't torment them?

Jesters to the Left: Dave's a regular at the Cue Club. He's also a solid and versatile drummer. I saw Jesters to the Left at the pool hall; they play Ways to be Wicked, which I equate with Lone Justice - which is a Tom Petty tune. Once you know, it's obvious.

Comments

  1. Hi Deb!
    That's a great line:

    I hope one day to be in a position where someone tells me my love-labor was appreciated.

    I'd like that fame, too, but I don't want people bugging me when I'm sitting in a restaurant. So, if I could have limited, defined fame it would be good, but I want full control over the amount. Probably not possible.

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  2. I'm willing to bet it has happened a few times for you by now. :-) I was shocked the first time it happened to me, and when I got a phone call, channeled through my work at the furniture store, from a fan who wrote "The Ballad of Beaufort Falls," (and still plays it at gigs). It means everything to have created something that made a difference to someone else.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mari, it really does. I will never tire of being excited with someone else, even if I made the thing we're excited about. I'm soon to release my first-ever songwriting collab and I will DIE OF EXCITEMENT. DIE.

      Delete

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