Thursday, August 21st, 2008 05:27 am
Most of you only know that the person your condoling me about is important to me: maybe you've gotten snippets over the years of my life with him, something he said, something we did together. I think since you're all being so very kind to me unconditionally, you deserve to know something about the guy. I'm not about to sanctify him, I'm just remembering him. Honestly, he was a grump and a slob (like me), and he could be socially awkward, and he dressed like a hobo no matter what I did. My children's friends remember him as the pantsless guy -- when he didn't actually have to go somewhere, he would frequently walk around the house in just a t-shirt, bare from the hips down, just pulling the hem down over his crotch when he had to pass in someone's view.

Gunter Grass said in The Tin Drum that a story really ought to start with a person's grandparents, so I'll tell you: his grandparents were, respectively, Austro-Hungarians who arrived in San Francisco ready to to take advantage of the building boom after the 1906 Fire and Earthquake, and on the other side, North Dakota Norwegians who broke away and came to Oregon to live like real Americans. Ted wasn't the first in his family to go to college. That would be his Aunt Elsie who did so withought her father's blessing or cooperation, and in fact against his prohibition.

Ted's a Peninsula boy, raised mostly in Menlo Park when that was a pleasant comfortable working-class suburb with an almost rural feel to it: in a house his father built. His father was a union carpenter, a job foreman. His mother called herself a secretary, but her job at the Alaska branch of the Geologic Survey was more like being the chief editor for a cadre of the researchers there, without the status (but with the respect). The Trollmans were the kind of people we wrestled with during the Vietnam War. I mean, they came out of World War Two convinced that the United States had a job to do, keeping the world safe for democracy, and staunchly supported every adventure the government got us into. By the time I met them, around 1971, they had changed their minds.

Ted's mother grew tomatoes, green beans, and Meyer lemons in her backyard. She canned the green beans and tomato soup each year and made apricot-pineapple jam from a lug provided by a friend with an apple orchard in San Jose (different times). She was the sharpest, most efficient woman, kind, and stoic. His father developed a twinkle in his eyes in retirement, but I heard he could be stern -- nothing compared to his father. Ted vowed when he had children nobody would say "wait till your father comes home" as a threat, and he would not be the disciplinarian. And he wasn't.

There are all these really 50s-looking photos of Ted and his older brothers. They all did Boy Scouts right into high school, they made cars for the Pinewood Derby, they went on Jamborees. Ted breeded guppies and worked at Nippon Goldfish as a kid, and collected comics, and got good grades. He went to UCSC, fully intending to graduate cum laude in history and go to law school,work in corporate law until he had enough money to retire, adn then live a life of enjoyment with his fish and his comics and his friends. Shortly after I met him he decided to skip the law school and corporate law part. Only it ended up being orchids he raised. He did graduate cum laude, with a major in Modern Russian History and a minor in Ancient Greek History. He kept on reading history his whole life. A lot of the books he read were about wars and the technology of war -- he called them "war porn," but there was nothing pornographic about his interest. Frank inherited this keen interest in history and politics.

I met Ted my first week at UCSC. He was a junior, I was a freshman. He was doing an all-nighter even though it was only the first week because one of his teachers had assigned a forty page paper to be done by the end of the second week. I was getting up extra early to work in the UCSC Garden. As I passed his dorm windowq, I saw his candle guttering in a scary fashion, threatening to catch his curtains on fire. We had a conversation about it, and later we saw each other again, and eventually, we agreed to see each other over the summer. He had a girlfriend that school year, and I had two boyfriends -- my high school sweetie had talked me into getting another guy to frolic with so he could justify sleeping around back home. But that summer I extricated myself from the other guys and went to visit him in Pacific Grove (basically Monterey). We went to see the squid run at the COast Guard DOck, we bought a bag of cherry tomatioes and we made iced cherry tomato soup out of them, and of course we ended up in bed together. He courted me with the little toads at Lake Lagunitas by the Stanford campus, with foraging for abandoned fruit in vacant lots (yes, this town had lots of vacant lots right then), with stargazing and comic books and a magnificent voice which I will never hear again.

Practicalities: the last I heard, Ted's body had arrived at the coroner's office from the tissue donation center, but tomorrow is Friday and then there's a weekend. So the ashes won't be back until Thursday or so, which entails running up against Labor Day weekend, and I really won't do anything that weekend that entails peoplde driving into Santa Cruz. The weekend after that is the weekend before avid arrives. So I've decided we'll do the memorial on Sunday, September 14. The Henry Cowell Park Walk will be in the morning, and the Lighthouse Field event will be in the afternoon. This also gives us a couple of weeks to sort out logistics -- tablem, chairs, etc. I know my brother says he has a couple of long folding tables, and I know my friend COnnie has stacks of chairs. If you're interested, let me know and I will see that you get plenty of warning as to the time and place -- parking, carpooli, es

I'm brainstorming the soundtrack of Ted's life, and I'll get someone to make a compilation for me and we'll find someone with a portable CD player. I haven't faced up to the photos yet, but I think that will be possible tomorrow, if it's quiet around here. When we send out directions, I'll suggest some favorite potluck foods of his -- suggest, not direct: nobody has to bring anything, let alone what I tell them to.

I'm quite literally falling asleep at the keyboard, which I hope means I'll be sleeping tonuight. I have a prescription waiting for me for some kind of sleeping aid, but I won't take any unless I really need them.

I met with the crematorium people today. They'll take care of procuring death certificates and a few other little tasks. I sprung for a biodegradable box: an astonishing expense, compared to the cost of the stupid unrecyclable standard plastic box, but not much more money in absolute terms, and I figure it's worth it to get what I want, and to not have another thing to put into the land fill. The other thing I ordered over the basic package was a bead. They take a pinch of the ashes and they cook it into a dollop of beauitiful glass, and then they want you to buy a chain or a stand for it, but all I wanted was the bead, which looks like seawater viewed from a specific angle, or like certain leaves when the sun shines just so.

The undertaker, or whatever he is, is a very kind man, very clear and not pushy (though he would have liked to have sold me more if I had been in the mood). He wears a tie made of a piece of "Starry Night." -- the Van Gogh picture, of course.

It's hard to believe in for more than a moment at a time. I keep thinking "I should save some fo this strudel for Ted," or "I should get back home, Ted will be wondering where I am."
Tags:
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 11:42 am (UTC)
*hug*

I hope you are asleep, it is still night in California.

The most heart-breaking bit of that was thinking of saving the strudel.

In my experience, it's easier to take in the fact of death of someone you lived with and saw every day, even as the pain is worse. You'll still keep on thinking you have to remember to tell him things, like your father and the music, but the absence of someone who was always there becomes almost a presence. It's people you only see sometimes who feel as if they ought to still be there where you used to see them. I can't go upstairs in my Aunt Jane's house without thinking I'll see my cousin Phil coming down around the curve.

I've been thinking about you a lot in the last couple of days and hoping you are doing as well as possible in the circumstances.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 06:50 pm (UTC)
tnhank you so much. I know what you mean about the absence becoming a presence -- I can feel it happening even while I still can't believe it.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 12:43 pm (UTC)
I missed your previous post, then I saw this. I am so sorry.
Thank you for sharing Ted's story.

I will light a candle for you, for Ted, if that's ok.

***hugs***


Friday, August 22nd, 2008 06:50 pm (UTC)
Of course it's ok. Thank you.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 01:33 pm (UTC)
Thank you for sharing this, Lucy. I feel very honored.

You are in my thoughts.

--Kimberly
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 06:50 pm (UTC)
thank you.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 01:33 pm (UTC)
I have been thinking of you since I read your sad news. Thank you for telling more more about Ted. You're the one I know, of course, but from the bits and pieces gleaned over the years, I've always got the impression that you both shared a love of nature and music. Wonderful things to have in common.

I'm glad the practicalities have all gone smoothly and that the undertaker was helpful and not pushy.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 06:50 pm (UTC)
thank you.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 02:20 pm (UTC)
Thank you. Thinking of you.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 06:50 pm (UTC)
thank you.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 04:20 pm (UTC)
I have always liked the way you refer to Ted as "the nice fellow." It's casual, funny, impersonal, and loving, intimate, specific. The kindness of your relationship comes through, and I mean kindness in both senses, that you cared for each other and took care of each other, and that you were of the same kind.

Thank you for telling stories about him.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 06:51 pm (UTC)
thank you.
ckd: two white candles on a dark background (candles)
[personal profile] ckd
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 05:46 pm (UTC)
Thank you for sharing these visions of Ted with us. Though I only knew of him what snippets you've mentioned over the years, this post has brought him to a sort of life in my mind.

I've been thinking of you over the past few days.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 06:51 pm (UTC)
thank you.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 08:22 pm (UTC)
Lucy, I'm so sorry. Perhaps saving the strudel is impractical, but when you have things to tell him, don't hold back. He's in your mind and heart, and he will be for a long time. I wish I could help.
Friday, August 22nd, 2008 08:47 pm (UTC)
Best courtship EVER.

I've been thinking about you a lot too.

P.
Saturday, August 23rd, 2008 12:20 am (UTC)
I have beads from each of the cats' ashes. The ashes go with mine into the nearest ocean when I die. The living cats get new homes. People keep asking me if I'm going to make a necklace of the beads, but I don't. I just like having them.

That's a great story of Ted's life and you'll have that to remember. He'll feel present for a while, I think, and then it will be mostly memories. That's how it always is with the cats.
Saturday, August 23rd, 2008 06:24 am (UTC)
Thank you for the view of Ted and of your life together.
Saturday, August 23rd, 2008 11:38 pm (UTC)
A warm and loving tribute. Thank you.
Sunday, August 24th, 2008 03:12 pm (UTC)
I am so sorry for your loss.
(Anonymous)
Wednesday, August 27th, 2008 01:13 pm (UTC)
I knew your husband from Dumbrella, and I have to say we really appreciate you coming by to let us know what happened. You and your family are in our thoughts and prayers, and Ted will be missed by everyone in the community. Folks have been saying a lot of nice things about your husband, here: http://www.dumbrella.com/bb/viewtopic.php?t=14178 We've lost a unique, thoughtful, and genuinely playful guy. We're all very sorry and wishing the best for you and your family.