Sunday, April 18, 2021

 Reflections - The Tease

Rills

With the bathroom door open, a shish-shish-shish floated to the great room. The shower silenced, the curtain swished open, and my husband’s foot thudded onto the bathmat. “Ha-ha.” His laughter started on a high pitch and cascaded lower. “Ha-ha-ha.”


I called from the great room. “What?”


With gray hair spiking wildly, Spence’s head poked through the doorway. “You’ve got to see Rills.”


Rills jogged out of the bathroom.


“Oh, too late.” Spence toweled an arm.


“What!”


“It was the funniest thing.”


“WHAT!”


Spence ducked back into the bathroom. “You’ll know when you see it.”


“I’ll forget before he does whatever again.” I stomped to the bathroom doorway. “Did he lick the shower stall?”


“No.”


“Walk across the shower curtain pole?”


Spence hung the towel. “That’s a good one, but no.”


“Teeter on the toilet seat and pee?”


Spence pulled on jeans. “I’m not going to tell you.”


And Spence kept mum about his favorite cat’s behavior.


Rills is Spence’s favorite cat because Rills picked Spence for favored person. This cat claws up Spence’s jeans and sweatshirt to perch on his shoulders. The cat pesters Spence while he’s cooking until he offers Rills food. And, when Spence reclines on the sofa, the cat fights off his brothers to gain the prime sleeping spot between Spence’s knees. Spence calls Rills a prankster.


Since I don’t tolerate any of those pranks, I’m fine with Rills’s choice. I accept his secondary attention—playing hard to get when I want a morning cuddle, nibbling my fingers while I’m in yoga relaxation pose, and climbing into my lap to touch noses if Spence stays out harvesting firewood too long.


I characterize Rills as a gazinta—the name my mom called me when I got into things she preferred I’d left alone. Rills knocks over storage containers on the lazy Susan, crawls inside grocery bags in search of fresh meat, and leaps into the kitchen sink to chomp on potato peels.


I kept my eyes on the gazinta.


Gazinta Rills

Nine days later, I hadn’t forgotten Spence’s laughter. I wrung out clothes presoaking in the utility sink and tossed them into the washing machine in the corner of the bathroom.


Spence came in with a dirty sweatshirt.


“Has Rills repeated his funny behavior?”


“No.” Spence dropped the sweatshirt. “Maybe it was a one-off. He can’t do it today anyway.”


Aha! Laundry day was a clue. “Did Rills jump into the hamper?” I’d seen his brother Gilbert do that while I sorted laundry once, but I’d already emptied the hamper and closed the top. “Did Rills crawl under the bathmat?” A pile of clothes covered it. “Did he hide inside the washing machine?” I leave the door ajar to mitigate the not-so-fresh front loader smell.


Spence didn’t answer any of my questions.


That evening he and Rills lounged on the sofa together. Spence elbowed the cat. “You want to go to the bathroom and show Janet?”


Rills yawned and placed one front paw on top of the other.


“Could he do it in another room?”


Spence shook his head.


That gave me two clues—in the bathroom but not on laundry day. I ruled out playing hide and seek between the shower curtain and liner. We’d witnessed that many times. Rills had thumped against the shower stall chasing his tail. He’d also jumped to the top of the linen closet and stared down at me brushing my teeth.


Determined to solve the mystery, I cranked up my imagination. Leap to the top of the linen closet, leap across to the dryer stacked atop the washing machine, and leap into the laundry baskets nestled inside each other up there? His head peeking out of the baskets would be funny, and, laundry day, the baskets are full of clothes on the floor. Or, with the detergent and non-chlorine bleach jugs balanced on the edge of the bathroom sink on laundry day, Rills couldn’t jump to the sink. Maybe he stood on his hind legs and pawed at his reflection in the medicine chest mirror. 


The next morning my curiosity peaked. I decided to test my guesses. Scooping Rills off the sofa, I carried him to the bathroom, set him on the floor, and used my teacher-voice. “Do something funny, Rills.”


He blinked.


Spence ambled in. “What are you doing with my buddy?”


“Trying to get him to do something funny.” I lifted Rills to the edge of the bathroom sink so he could stand on his back feet. “Are big enough to reach the mirror?”


Rills kicked his hind legs in the air, but he could have reached the mirror with his front paws.


Spence grabbed his buddy and dumped him into the utility sink. “There. Only last time he jumped in by himself.”


Rills circled the square tub, rubbed his whiskers against the faucet, then sat and stared at Spence.


Spence guffawed.


Maybe I missed something. Jumping three feet up and a foot down to a spot Rills couldn’t see seemed brave to me—unless he’d scouted the tub from the top of the linen closet.


Spence changed to a deep belly laugh.


Rills pulled back his ears.


And Rills could have leapt into the utility sink on laundry day while Spence’s firewood harvesting clothes presoaked. The surprised cat would have paddled in muddy, wood-chip-speckled water before jetting out of the bathroom.


Spence let loose a string of heeheehees.


Rills hadn’t done anything funny, but Spence had. I chuckled at his infectious laughter.


Tired of tolerating the humans, Rills put his paws on the edge of the utility sink and vaulted to the floor. He held his tail high, curled its tip, and trotted away.

Rills in Utility Sink


Sunday, April 4, 2021

 Reflections - People Matter

Cup of Tea

I’m naive. 


When I listened to the morning news on March 17, the broadcaster might as well have reached through the speakers and bopped me on the head.


Women of Asian Descent Were

6 of the 8 Victims in Atlanta Shootings [


Unlike racism against Blacks, I’d never personally witnessed or consciously absorbed news about racism against Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders, but . . .


Asian-Americans were targeted

in nearly 3,800 hate incidents in the past year.


The news constricted my throat and squeezed my heart. Why are we white Americans so afraid of others?


Consider Kayoko.


The only disagreement I ever had with Kayoko was over a cup of tea she brewed me. In the corner of a hallway, where the old Ruffing Montessori School building had a stove at peril to all who passed, she handed me a delicate porcelain cup with a full cheek smile and said, “Thank you.” 


“No,” I countered. “Thank you!”


Kayoko enjoyed kitchens whatever their size or location. She treated her students and any interested teachers to monthly hot lunches in the winter. During the summer, she took campers outside to work in Ruffing’s garden—planting, watering, and harvesting because “It’s no fun to weed all the time.” On the evening of July 24 the year her husband died, we sat on the patio of Dewey’s Coffee Cafe to sip tea and munch cranberry walnut muffins. A rainbow topped the evening as we celebrated our shared birthday. Our day and year matched, but not knowing the hour of her birth, we never figured out who was older. It didn’t matter. In America, that honor belonged to the child born first. In Japan, the older twin was born last. We considered ourselves exactly the same age.


Japanese-American Kayoko isn’t scary.


Deer Creek

Consider Jyungmin.


I gained Jyungmin’s friendship by tutoring her son. She was the consummate party organizer inviting all the Ruffing teachers to her house for picnics on her backyard terrace, complete with an ornamental fish pond. When I stepped inside her house, pairs of shoes sat in rows by the door. “You don’t have to take off your shoes,” she would say, but I didn’t want to break her custom or be the cause of dirtying the clean floors.


After I retired, Jyungmin gathered a group of teachers, packed them in her van, and drove to Wells Wood for visits. On the first, she grabbed my shoulder outside. “You go first in case there are snakes.” On the second, we waded in Deer Creek by the rapids that Spence likes to call Janet Falls because I slipped on a mossy rock and fell there one day. Jyungmin slipped and landed on her bottom shouting, “Don’t anyone take my picture!”


Korean-American Jyungmin isn’t scary.


Consider Diana.


In March 2013 Diana joined the fiction workshop I attended in Cleveland. Once a month I maneuvered to sit next to this kindred spirit and whispered side comments to her until the moderator shushed me. A medical doctor turned writer, Diana impressed me with her writing bravery. Her Thanksgiving story, for example, has the husband invite his ex-wife to the dinner. His current wife and a grumbling, teenage daughter add to the mix. Diana sprinkles humor into the tense, page-turning plot. 


Though I stopped attending the workshops, Diana and I keep in touch. I read her column, The Medical Insider. She reads Janet of Wells Wood and always emails encouragement such as, “This is the funniest story I read about hot pepper. I enjoy you calling them the beast.”


Chinese-American Diana isn't scary. 


Screenshot of The Medical Insider Heading

Kayoko, Jyungmin, and Diana make life beautiful.


The Indian-American, who offered to order silk to make me a sari because I admired hers in college, made life beautiful.


The Indoneasian-American woman, who offered to sew my daughter a dress so she could attend the senior prom with the woman’s son, made life beautiful.


The first grade Pakistani-American who, when I walked into his classroom, ran to beg me for a reading lesson, made life beautiful.


People from the Asian Pacific region belong in my universe. They join the many ethnic groups woven into the fabric that makes America great. Like my Aunt Marge said, “It’s the people that matter.” Not the culture. Not the politics. Not the skin tone.


Asian Lives Matter


Don’t Be Afraid


You’re Welcome in My Universe


It’s Great

Poster from Lisa Wong


Note:

Diana’s The Medical Insider is temporarily on hold, but there are back issues available here