The Crooked Fingers

They stopped the air conditioning.  The little hall went silent.  Except for my parents, siblings, and my High School dear friend, the audience was Japanese.  I was petrified.  My Japanese guitar teacher had insisted that, part of his teaching me meant that I had to perform in his annual repertoire of students.  I was his only “gaijin”, that is, the only foreigner.  

Mind you, he seemed so old!  He was probably in his 30’s, but I was a teenager, I was 16 years old.   He did not speak English nor Spanish nor French.  I knew enough Japanese to take a taxi or shop.  But we communicated on a weekly basis through our mutual understanding of clefs, crotchets and quavers.  Isn’t that a universal language?

He was so formal!  He always bowed when he came to my house – 9-11 Minami 3-chome, Ebisu, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo- impeccably removing his shoes and putting on the slippers.  I bowed back, but not quite well.   Under the severe thick black-rimmed glasses, he had a twinkle in his eye, a beautiful smile, and the most amazing fingers that plucked the guitar and made it weep. 

But I did not notice these things then.  I was too immature.  I was ambivalent about my lessons with him, and I knew I always disappointed him.  I never practiced enough.  Ie, ie ie.  No, no no.  Hai, hai, hai.  Yes, yes, yes.

Somehow, we understood each other.  He came dressed in a dark suit and a dark tie.  He seemed severe, but when he took that guitar and strummed it, all his Japanese formality of those days melted away.  He loved classical guitar and would get exasperated with me because he did not find in me the same enthusiasm.  Little did he know that I did have it, though it was a bit dormant.  I was too young then!

So the day arrived when I had to perform at the concert.  Invitations had been sent, beautifully calligraphed on thick rice paper.  バーバラ ディロン.  Barbara Dillon, in Katakana.

If memory serves me, I played 3 musical compositions.  Within the first couple of minutes of my taking the stage, the air conditioning was turned off because it made a purring sound.  For some reason, someone in that hall decided to give me total silence for the performance.  It then became quiet, like a tomb.  I had stage fright, my fingers were trembling, but I wanted to make my professor proud.  After all, I was, as the Argentines say, “sapo de otro pozo” (a toad from another well). 

In that deep silence, I took the plunge.  I still remember plucking those strings and how, soon enough, I fell into the right rhythm and cadence and mood.  The silence of the hall was deafening.  But, miracles of miracle, I never ever made a mistake!  At the end, the applause was overwhelming.  I looked up and saw my family and friend beaming.  And, standing in the back of the room was that gentleman and gentle professor with the biggest smile I had ever seen.

I studied classical guitar through college and my Father got me the Argentine equivalent of a Stradivarius.  He had high hopes.  I did not deliver.  Life interfered.

I have always returned to my guitar especially when I have needed succor and relief from sorrows.  Today, my fingers are no longer spry.  They are a little bit crooked and stiff with age.

Yet, I am soon getting back together again with my guitar and music scores of days gone by…and these crooked fingers will get the exercise that my soul has been longing for, finally!

Beauty among the Ruins

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I have a broken ruby red crystal little pitcher that used to belong to my parents. It was the smallest one of a set of three. When I was a little girl, I used to love staring at the three that represented Father, Mother and me (my younger sister Cynthia was missing, since they were just a trio!). One day, I must have been 5 years old, I climbed on a chair and tried to grab one, and it fell and broke into smithereens. So then there were two.

Fast forward to when I was in my early 20s. I moved to Philadelphia, and my Mother gave me the littlest pitcher to take to my new home, because she knew of my sentimental attachment to that little jug.

Life happened, and I carried that little pitcher wherever I went, until one day someone dropped it and it shattered in 4 pieces or so. I was heartbroken. I identified with that little broken crystal flask. It carried so many memories of where I had been and where I was. For some reason, I saved the crystal shards in a box. I couldn’t bear to throw them out.

One day, about three years ago, I came across the Japanese art of “kintsugi”, a technique using gold and lacquer that enhances the flaws of the damaged object and, as the Smithsonian Institute says, “not only accepts but highlights the life of the object.”

It dawned on me that I could learn to restore the broken little pitcher. Somewhere at home I have the gold and the lacquer that I bought to do it. I hope to spend some time mending this memento that represents so many significant stages in my life. It will be one of my most cherished possessions and emblematic of what it was and what it will become: a most beautifully rebuilt little pitcher and stronger than it ever was.

Come to think of it, isn’t “kintsugi” a metaphor for life?

The Nightmare of the Scream

Earlier this year, I considered May the “Nightmare of The Scream” for I witnessed an old woman’s look of horror with her mouth agape. Go figure. Probably because I have always loved art and I have had a fondness for Edvard Munch’s The Scream, that open mouth reminded me of the painting. I especially have Munch’s caricature of horror seared in my memory because I was so impressionably young when I first studied it in High School and have been trying to write a story based on that lightbulb-shaped head.

Fast forward to this past July, and I am walking the pristine beaches of the Hamptons in New York. So many shells. So many frolicking dolphins. So many dancing terns and sandpipers. So many memories of youth and beautiful summer days with young children, fun siblings, new potential “in-laws”, old parents.

And then? I am spooked beyond belief: a young dead shark, staring like a dessicated and dumbfounded ancient creature frozen in shock…

There is beauty in that petrified “rigor mortis”, but the little shark reminded me of that stupefied old woman, who belonged in the annals of history or an old and yellowed yearbook.

And yet, I couldn’t stop laughing. Hey, I was expecting to see some perfect teeth in the making! It was a baby shark, after all!

The dead toothless shark also reminded me of a little old man who once upon a long time ago grabbed my wrist on a subway in Tokyo with his toothless gums and planted a soft gumless kiss. At the time I stared at my High School friend horrified. And then we laughed! How weirdly odd and sweet was that!

The little old man was tiny and bald and looked up at me and smiled a toothless grin. I hadn’t thought of that memory until I saw The Nightmare of The Scream.