The Lost Years: Spring, 2001 thru December 25, 2004
It was a time of loss after loss after loss . . .
With the implosion of the relationship with S., resulting in selling our faux Victorian house in the lovely Hamlet of Islip on the beautiful South Shore of Long Island, where we had lived since 1986, it representing to my mind the zenith of the American Dream, life as I had known and loved it was radically altered. When the house sold and S. moved out in early August of 2001, I spent a frantic several weeks selling everything I could, my second set of Victorian oak antiques, giving the rest away, including my library of over 1,000 books collected since childhood, and generally being in a numbed state of keening shock and rage at the world and the Kosmos in general.
My Father passed over unexpectantly on July 25th, so me and trusty Chutney dog got in my old bomb of a 1988 Pontiac and took off for Jackson, MS. to be with the family and to pay my last respects. My plan to be with him during the Christmas holidays and to stay with him at his bedside in the VA nursing home was as many plans go most thoroughly thwarted. Driving back, pushing like crazy to get back to Long Island to make it in time for son, Tommy's, 21st birthday party were blown askew when the water pump disintegrated all over I-95 just after I passed the North/South Carolinas border. Another plan totally thwarted.
I was sitting in my office browsing the net early in the morning of September 11th when one of my clients, an employee of the then defunct TWA, having recently been sold to American Airlines, called me , screaming at me to turn on the TV, that a plane had just flown into the World Trade Center. The rest of a day was a blur that ended with me trying to help survivors at LaGuardia Airport as described in this post. I spent the next two weeks working in Manhattan as a Red Cross Mental Health volunteer and doing per diem work for United Airlilnes out at Newark Airport, the home station of United Flight 93 that crashed into the Pennsylvannia countryside.
In late September, the house closed and I took my money and went to Maryland where I bought at a good dealer's price, a friend of one of my son-in-laws, a brand new Rialta RV with all the trimmings and moved the last of my stuff from the Islip House into it. For October and November, I lived in the Summer Camp of dear, fellow Vietnam Vet, Bro' friend and colleague Vince and his wife, Ro, in the foothills of the Adirondacks on Woodland Lake. On October 12, 2001, what would have been S's and my 22nd anniversary, I had a divorce ceremony on the spot where we had met in 1979, and a year later gotten married, with a dear friend of ours, Pat, who died later in February of 2002 of the cancer she had been battling for the past several years. In December, I left New York, devastated not only by the implosion of the relationship with S. and life as I had known it on Long Island, but also for the first time in 29 years no longer with my identity as a New Yorker. In hindsight I can say I was more devastated by this reality than anything else.
I spent a week traveling south, visitng my daughters, Rebecca and Jennifer, and their families in Maryland, and driving to Jackson, where I spent my first holiday season back in my childhood home of Mississippi since I had left in 1961. I spent one of the stranger New Years ever, singing hymns at an online friend's church in Bayou Country Louisianna. After my daughters visited us in Jackson for a week in the second week of January I hit the road again and continued traveling through 34 states, Toronto and some 24,000 miles before I hit Tucson, a temporary layover, having many very lonely, not happy at all adventures with Chutney and a Chocolate Labrador puppy, Lady, we found abandoned in one of Abraham Lincoln's homes in Kentucky on the way to Gethsemane Abby, where Thomas Merton lived much of his life and wrote many of his books. I visited my ex-business partner in the Twin Cities, stayed with an online friend in Wisconsin for a week, weathered a snow/ice storm in Iowa and Kansas, visited my machine gunner, Don, from Vietnam in Oklahoma and was very moved crying for an hour by a Huey gunship tilting in to the snow covered mountains of Angel Fire, New Mexico, the first national monument to the fallen from the senseless war of my generation, Vietnam.
After visiting the Grand Canyon, Meteor camp grounds, Taos, Santa Fe, Chaco Canyon, Roswell, and Gila Cliff dwellings near Silver in New Mexico, I went to returned to Tucson, where I made final arrangements before traveling with the TOP Vietnam Vets tour to Vietnam. I spent a most healing two weeks in Vietnam, falling in lust with one of the participants, J., ex-wife of a vet, who fathered her daughter, and a research psychologist with the Tucson VA. Against my better judgement upon our return from Vietnam, she convinced me to move in to her lovely home in Tucson and to sell the RV for a huge loss. I got a spiffy little Miata convertible, got a job as a clinical supervisor, and everything was hunky dory for a couple of months until she decided she wasn't in love with me after all and asked me to move out so she could resume her relationship with another vet she had been seeing before she met me on the Vietnam trip. You've read of men who have trophy wives? Well, J. had a series of trophy Vets. Hey, I knew it was nothing but an illusory attempt to try to get over the still devastating loss of the relationship with S.
I decided to stay in Tucson with the fairly good job I had, and I still had enough money left over from the sale of the RV to set myself up in a fairly nice apartment with my third set of Victorian Oak furniture. Tucson had a very active performance poetry commuity, a good recovery community, and a fairly good group of peace activists. With the University and the stunning scenery it was not a bad place to try to reinvent myself. In November of 2002 I successfully ran and finished the New York City marathon, achieving my goal of finishing under 5 hours, just barely in 4 hours and 53 minutes. Son Tommy, who had crashed and burned again with drugs went to another rehab and I paid for him to move out to live with me in Tucson. We had a pretty good life and in December of 2002 drove the Miata back to Jackson to spend the last holiday season in the old family homestead on Hawthorn Drive, since Mother was selling the family home to move into a retirement community. Another home lost, another ending of a major part of my life.
As 2003 rolled into the New Year, I was becoming more and more unsettled and distraught at the way the Bushwhacks had taken 9/11 and used it as an excuse to go to war forever in the world wide crusade against terrorism, which I am of the mind they support and create more than most. I was at a dead-end with the job, discovering again why the wisdom of my being in private practice for 20 plus years was a good thing -- I don't really play well in organizational settings. Right before my 60th birthday I was convinced that I had to leave not only the clinical supervisory job but Tucson, yeah even the hallowed land of my birth, the USA. So I applied to become a member of the first project of Nonviolent Peaceforce in Sri Lanka, and I was hired.
After training in Chaing Mai, Thailand, a bit of a fiasco, where I got a Chaing Mai Starbucks Coffee t-shirt, and a 13,000 mile drive-around the U.S. attending the Vets for Peace Conference in San Francisco, visiting friends and family and making appearances at local support groups for Nonviolent Peaceforce I flew to Colombo to join the first project in late September of 2003. By Christmas, being assigned where I have lived for the past year and a half plus deep in the bush of Mutur, Trincomalee District, I was seriously questioning the wisdom of my dash to run away from the devastating losses of my life the last several years like some French Foreign Legionnaire, trying to escape the lost of love, the loss of homes, the loss of everything near and dear. On November 29th S. out of the blue called me and we tried to renew our friendship, me projecting mightily again it would evolve into a reconciliation, but by February, I broke it off because I was again putting in much more than she was willing or able to provide to me. I made an effort to develop a relationship with good friend B. from Tucson, who served as a requisite bridge for me to accept finally the end of the relationship with S.
The last year has been hard, harder than I could have imagined, though I did some more traveling to Mumbai for the World Social Forum where I was mostly miserable since I was so alone, to Curnevaca, Mexico as the Field Team Member Representative to the governing council of NP with a week in Tucson where I wrecked the Miata, rear-ending someone getting off of I-5 while visiting friend and first sponsor, Peter, a lovely three weeks in England with dear friend B., whom I tried to make a relationship with, but the best it would ever be was like the old Meatloaf song, "Two Outta Three Ain't Bad", and a second trip to Vietnam in November. In early December of 2004, after being robbed for the fourth or fifth time in Colombo losing the iPod I had bought that summer in Tucson and a silver money clip I had bought in Edinburg, I was in as low and depressed a state of bafflement and utter despair at what my life was about and where I was going as ever I have been in. I knew there was no future for me at NP, and the only choice I had was to return again to Tucson to try to muster up again a new way to reinvent myself.
Then the Tsunami hit Sri Lanka about 9:05 a.m. on the morning of December 26, 2004 -- the results, devasting for so much of the country and so many Sri Lankans, were absolutely miraculous for me.
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