For those of you who read “Dancing With Cats,” a belated pictoral addition (courtesy of Abigail Chapin):
Sorry you can’t see the face paint.
For those of you who read “Dancing With Cats,” a belated pictoral addition (courtesy of Abigail Chapin):
Sorry you can’t see the face paint.
Mike, Myra-Jean, and I went to the Atwater Farmer’s Market this morning for our habitual pupusa run. It was a beautiful day, and MJ was in fine spirits, wearing a particularly fetching, even stylish outfit — chosen all by herself — a black and white houndstooth jacket, wide legged black pants, and a pink and green hand-knit sunhat. A well-dressed kid on the east side of L.A. is about as notable as a screenwriter in Santa Monica, but MJ is an interesting case, as her mother — I — could not be less fashion-conscious. As in, I will be buried in jeans and a tee shirt. So in this case, our little apple — sartorially speaking — has fallen so far from the tree as to be, well, an orange. Lucky for her, and fun for us.
At the market she got her face painted like a blue cat, and the look was complete.
After eating, we watched the tail end of a dance performance by a group of Native Americans — I have no idea what tribe. They drummed, shouted, waved rattley (is that an adjective?) instruments, and danced steps of great complexity — one of them in bare feet — right there on Glendale Boulevard. It looked like fun, and a real workout, to boot. (It occurred to me — shallow cretin that I am, that they should offer an exercise class based on this. I would sign up. If I exercised, ever. Which I don’t. Unless you count walking up my front steps. Which, depending on the number of grocery bags I’m carrying, I do.)
I digress. Back to the drummers. MJ loved them, and danced along for quite some time, hat pushed back, houndstooth glinting in the sun, feline features deeply concentrated on keeping the beat. Which she didn’t. Still, it was adorable. Then the dancing stopped, and the troupe’s leader, a bespectacled, bookish-looking fellow wearing the closest thing to a loincloth I’ve seen outside of the Natural History Museum, made a speech. It was about farmer’s markets, and farmers, how they are saving the earth, and how we must all “love our Mother.” When he said that last bit he reached down and touched the “earth.” Except the earth was the sidewalk of Glendale Boulevard. He did this a number of times. I found it depressing. I almost wished he’d brought a little pile of dirt with him, as touching the sidewalk was only reminding all of us of how far from any kind of real “earth” we were. It made me want to go home and get back to the terraces, where I may not have earth per se, but I can at least reach down and touch clay. And paperwhite corpses. And gypsum, which might contain earth-like elements, or at least feels earthy if you close your eyes.
So that’s what I did. Not close my eyes; we went home. Once there, Mike, Myra-Jean, and I changed our shoes and went out to the yard, where we worked for some time in sunlit, satisfied silence. Mike swept, and MJ and I went after the small rose bush next to the Mother-Of-All-Rosebushes in the second terrace. We dug and dug and dug, I in my shirt sleeves, MJ still — at her own insistence — in the ensemble she’d worn earlier, including the cat face. Every once in a while a car would pass and I could feel peoples’ eyes on us. It’s pretty unusual to see white people doing their own gardening in L.A. It’s even rarer to see an entire family doing it together. And when one of them is a two-year-old dressed like Anna Wintour with a blue cat face, well, you just have to slow down and peer…
An hour later, the small rose bush is almost dug up. The yard is swept. The yard waste bin is full. MJ has shed her clothes (and had her “face” wiped off) and gone to bed. She is tired from her morning’s exertions. I hope she will dream of drums, dancing, pupusas, and lots and lots of earth. Or clay. Or even, I suppose, the sidewalk on Glendale Boulevard, which is not Mother Earth but is not NOT her, either.
Mike and I are quiet in the house. Enough has been done for one day.
We’re a funny little tribe, but we’re happy.