Showing posts with label About Me. Show all posts
Showing posts with label About Me. Show all posts

Thursday, May 28, 2009

You'll make it . . .





Mount Rubidoux is a hill which marks the boundary between Riverside, the city where I live, and Rubidoux (roo-bi-doe), it's less reputable neighbor. At just over thirteen hundred feet, the hill is quite sizable, but is by no means the mountain its name might conjure up in the imagination of one who has never seen it.

My grandmother's house sits right at the foot of this hill, with the third tier of her back yard backing the trail that climbs it. As a child, I went up and down that hill more times than I could hope to count. Some of my earliest, and haziest, memories take place there. I can remember walking up with my dad, right after he and my mom divorced. I remember climbing into the tower on the Fourth of July, with cousins who were some of my closest friends before time and distance inevitably weakened the bonds between us. I remember, too, slipping and sliding down the side of the mountain behind my older and more courageous brothers, as they ran straight down, occasionally glancing back to see whether I was still alive, and threatening to leave me behind...

This Monday, Memorial Day, finding myself at home with nothing to do, I became increasingly restless. After trying for some time to find some diversion, I resolved to go for a walk up the hill that's such a familiar part of my life. I could find no one else to accompany me, so I was alone on this particular trek, which isn't all that unusual. I climbed the hill, Found my favorite rock (one shaped kind of like a chair) overlooking the city airport, and watched the planes take off for a while, then began my descent.

When I was about halfway down, I passed a fairly sizable crowd of people walking up. By chance, I caught the eye of a woman of about 65. She was somewhat withered, but still spry, and as she looked up at me, she said, "You'll make it," and smiled.

I probably smiled back, but I was too shocked to know for sure. What was she talking about? Hadn't I already made it? I was on my way down. She was the one with hard work ahead of her, not me. Did I really look so worn out, even after resting for half an hour, that there was some concern as to whether I'd make it to the bottom all right?

Or was she talking to herself? Old people do that all the time, and crazy people too, for that matter (or so I hear). Was her encouraging remark one aimed at herself and simply projected onto me? I'm certain at this point that I'll never know, but as I reflect upon the experience, I must admit that at some point I thought of her as some kind of soothsayer, telling me that I would make it, not only down the mountain, but in some larger pursuit. I'm still hoping she was right.

Friday, December 26, 2008

I'm trying to write a "personal Statement" for a graduate application. It's only supposed to be 1-2 pages, something I should be able to write in about...40 minutes, but for some reason, this has taken me about four weeks now, and I still don't have a clue where I'm going to start. What is it that makes this so much more difficult than any other essay? I never had so much difficulty with any of the scholarship essays I wrote, and it's basically the same thing. I'm supposed to tell them why they should accept me into the program--why I'm interested in English, what I've done to explore that interest, how I can add to the conversation...

I guess in some ways it's more like a job interview than anything else--an interview directed by the person who held the job initially, and knows precisely what it takes. Most of the scholarships I applied for were funded by people who had little idea what I would really be doing, and I could generalize my interests to the point that they sounded impressive without necessarily being concrete or realistic. It was like selling a new computer to 65-year-old woman who couldn't tell a mac from a pc. Now it's like my customer is computer science major, working for Intel, and no matter what I say, I'm bound to embarrass myself.

Friday, December 5, 2008

April is the Cruelest Month?

My mother has always been a tad idealistic. She’s a sucker for multi-level marketing (a euphemism for pyramid schemes if you ask me—if there is a significant difference, please let me know) and when those are in short supply, she’s got a closet-full of fall-back entrepreneur plans. She’s been a seamstress since I can remember, probably since she can remember. She’s made wedding cakes and wedding dresses, taught cake decorating, worked in a hair salon, sold legal insurance, painted pottery, run a store in our front room (Becky’s Unique Boutique), and she’s always wanted to own a restaurant or bakery. Above all, she is a firm believer that she can do anything she puts her mind to, so long as she can keep her mind there long enough to do it.

In the case of my name, this belief held true. Three years before I was born, as the story is told, my mother decided that she wanted a baby girl born in April, named April Rose, and her mind was set on it. Knowing you were a planned baby is worse, in some ways, than knowing you were an accident, I think. My mother once told me that on the night of my conception, she and my dad were fighting, but she had a plan and she had to carry it through. I could have been spared that story. The doctors induced labor on April 1st, April Fool’s Day, and I literally flipped. I was breech, and was born by cesarean the next day.

While my mother was healing from the surgery, my father was left to fill out the birth certificate, and a few days later I left the hospital as Mary Elizabeth Osborn. Her plan, so carefully undertaken, and successful up until the moment that the pen hit that paper, had been shattered. I can imagine the disgust she must have felt when she found out. What I can’t imagine is how my father didn’t know that I was supposed to be named April. If she had really been planning for three years, it doesn’t seem possible that she could have forgotten to mention the fact. Did they never discuss my name before my mom went into the hospital? Or, more abhorrent, did my father know and name me Mary anyway? My parents were divorced about three and a half years later, and I can’t help but think that this mishap, whether oversight or intentional insult, was an early indication of what was coming.

When they went to pick my sister, Lisa, up from Brownies later that week, the pre-pubescent girls gathered around me, prodding me with their sticky little fingers, and one of the girls inevitably asked my name. That’s when my mother finally burst into tears as she wailed, “Mary!”

Mary’s not a terrible name. I’ve known a Mary or two in my lifetime, and without exception I’ve found them to be more than passably pleasant. But I am not a Mary. After the Brownies outburst, my mom and dad went back to the hospital and changed the name on the birth certificate. Mom and Dad compromised, perhaps one of the last compromises in their failing marriage, and I now bear the name April Elizabeth Osborn.

I hated the name April as a kid—though not as much as I secretly, quietly disdained the name Mary. I hated that it’s the name of a month, and that the first thing most people ask when they learn my name is “Were you born in April?” and that the first thing they ask when they find out that I was, in fact, born in April is “Is that why your parents named you April?” I hated it when boys chanted “April is a fool!” every April first while I was in elementary school.

But the name’s grown on me. Twenty-plus years will do that for you. In my sophomore year of college, when I started speaking Spanish with one of my roommates, it was only natural for my name to become Abril, which flows better in Spanish than the English version. It was only after being called this for a year that I realized an old friend who had autographed a shirt for me once had made it out to Aprile, not misspelling my name, but translating it to Italian, his language of preference. My affection for my name, and by extension for my mother, has grown with my realization of its versatility.

According to an online encyclopedia (Wikipedia), “The derivation of the name (Latin Aprilis) is uncertain,” it could mean “to open,” alluding to springtime, or it could be derived from Aphrodite since it is traditional to name months after gods.

So I could be one who opens, or one who is open, to situations or people. By definition I cannot be closed-minded. I cannot dress in black too often, as this would go against the illusion to springtime, and I cannot be completely and utterly plain as my name is related to the goddess of love, lust, and beauty. But there is uncertainty in the derivation, so I could be all of the above, and if I were, would it be surprising? If I were a gothic girl of less than average beauty and singularly stubborn in my views, would anyone look twice? Would anyone look once? Or would they all look the other way? Would it all make more sense if my name were Mary?

I’m none of these. Or at least, I like to think that I’m not. I dress in gray more often than black, but pink, blue, and even green, all have a place in my closet. I won’t pretend to have the beauty of Aphrodite, but I do pride myself in my openness. But until I wrote this essay, I never associated that pride with my name, nor do I really now. Still, I can’t shake the feeling that if my mother had been a little less emotional, if she hadn’t cared quite so much, or if my father had been a little more stubborn, I might have turned out a completely different person. When friends hear this story for the first time, they screw up their faces and say “you don’t look anything like a Mary,” whatever that means. If the story were reversed, they would probably say the same thing about April, and I have to wonder whether Mary would have molded to me, or I to Mary. But at the end of the day, I’m just me.

(April 2008)

The Origins of my Borrowed Views

There is very little original thought on this planet, and I do not claim to be the possessor of any of it. That being the case, it is highly unlikely that anything I say here hasn't been said before. I am absolutely certain that, even as I am writing this, someone somewhere has thought the exact same thing. Therefore, to avoid any possible copyright infringement/plagiarism, I hereby acknowledge that my thoughts are not my own but are a compilation of the thoughts of others which I have heard, processed, and regurgitated as they appear here. To the original owners of these thoughts (including those which have yet to be written, or even thought, by me): I both pay you homage and ask for your apologies. Hopefully more of the prior and less of the former, but as my thoughts have yet to be recorded, it's difficult to tell just now.