Showing posts with label morality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label morality. Show all posts

Monday, September 17, 2012

Getting Lost in New York City

Pic by Emiko Iwata Hall
          Typically, I've always had a pretty good sense of direction. When I was five, I watched Mount St. Helens explode before my very eyes in the north. Mount Hood, in all its grandeur, hovers over Portland from the east while to the west, Oregon’s rolling coastal range awaits its weekender community. However, here in New York City, it took three weeks after settling in before I could say with any confidence which subway entrance took me back to my apartment.
          My girlfriend has lived between Manhattan and Brooklyn for almost 10 years now, thus, I’ve been content to let her do all of the navigating. So, when it was time to get the vehicle inspection tags for our new car, like a teenager who’d just got her license, I was so proud of my first attempt to drive on my own. With Google’s directions printed (large, color map included), I cautiously drove through the uneven streets, bouncing around trying to avoid potholes and road hoarding cyclists while looking back and forth between road signs and instructions. After circling the neighborhood, I finally pulled over to catch my breath and regain my bearings after missing the correct turn to the mechanic’s garage that was, literally, one mile from our apartment.
          Venturing out alone again, I nearly missed the beginning of my movie at the AMC Theater. To avoid dawdling tourist crowds and hasty city locals, I leaned up against the foot of a concrete mountain waiting for my phone’s demon-possessed GPS to guide me as the nefarious blue arrow swirled like an Ouija board in the palm of my hand. Outside the 6th Ave subway entrance, I decided to head in one direction and see how it might skip around, hoping it to be toward the theater on 8th Ave. Squinting through the glare of the haze as I got closer to the next block, I could just begin to make out the green, street sign for… 5th Ave. Damnit. 
          I’ve heard I’m not the only one with this dilemma. Without a clear view of the Empire State building or the Freedom Tower, some new transplants carry along compasses in case they’re having problems with their GPS or internal compass. The truth is, beyond losing oneself in the caverns of NYC under the summer’s murky air, there are plenty of roadblocks that may steer the unassuming person into places they really didn’t want to go. A few weeks ago, I found myself reaching over my partner’s arm honking the horn, screaming at the van that was trying to back up over our MINI while the SUV beside us, only inches away, was still trying to creep up! Like a trapped crazed woman in darkness, surrounded by beeping and honking, I rolled down my window cursing, tempted to reach out and punch the giant, white fender arm's length away from my face. In complete honesty, I wanted to pull the lady driver out of her GMC by her up-do.
          Then there are the less conspicuous barriers that guide us like hedges through a doomed maze. Florescent, blinking signs prod us along THIS WAY as the pied piper plays to the tune of “Name Brand” steadfastly by street vendor’s tables. Refraining in my head like a Broadway musical, in and out of Abercrombie, Billabong, Guess, Gap, Converse, Lacoste, even Armani Exchange, “Hip glasses will help orient me in the Big City and help me feel at home!”  
           I kept myself well poised at first, gasping at the $60-200 prices for the flimsy, metal frames or the Made in China plastic with the glued emblem missing, that is until another sign pointed me hopelessly over the cliff... the Sunglass Hut. 
           Instead of a bejeweled side emblem, properly stamped, maybe even etched—Ray Ban... Futile to resist, so, I tried on several pairs, narrowing it down between the original 50’s and the 80’s Wayfarer styles--tortoise and black, or an understated yet funky, flat army green. The young sales girl had me come outside and compare the difference between the normal lens for $125 and the polarizing for $175. The only reason I couldn’t bring myself to do it was because I had already justified spending $85 on a new shirt, shorts, and another pair of flip-flops that would better match my wardrobe than my other 4 pairs. I had spent it consciously, deliberating on whether I could live without any of it considering I was still unemployed.

          Some people could say deciding to come to New York was when I’d truly gone astray. I’m sure, after living in the conservative Christian world surrounded by Christian music and Christian books, having graduated from a Christian college with a theology degree and serving for years in a Christian church most of my life to now a divorced, recently out lesbian living with her girlfriend in Brooklyn. It would, in all senses, appear that I’ve completely lost my way. Of course, I’ve had my doubts, compiled with dealings of guilt and fear in the past. But now in the midst of the harsh heat and oppressive humidity, it would almost have me believe I truly was on the path to Hell.
          
          After making it to my movie at the AMC, a Chinese man in powdered blue pants and a white linen shirt shuffled in front of me like a spiritual guide through the crowded street. A white, plastic bag hung heavy from his hand—his dinner perhaps. He eventually made his way to a little wooden stool beside an easel with a caricature of someone’s face. Flanking his spot, a Persian man was selling falafels on pita and a young Black man sold a rainbow assortment of watches and accessories while Edward Scissor Hands stood in front offering to pose for pictures. I paused while my internal GPS began to reboot...  
          As a newbie to New York, I wasn’t just spinning between tourist and local, wanting the people in front of me to get out of my way while dying to pull over and try the grilled kebabs—I was playing Marco Polo with myself. Where am I really?
          As I passed another Mediterranean food stand wafting its sweet aroma like a burnt offering to the heavens, a different verse began playing like a silent, black and white film that was in desperate need of restoration. It flickered across my forehead, “But to do justly… and to love mercy… and to walk humbly...”
          The verse was still hanging in my mind when I finally made it back to the quiet of my apartment. I plopped down on the couch and hunched in front of my laptop as I began to eat my dinner when I came across a friend’s email request for her non-profit organization. She is ready to furnish their new home in Africa that will help orphans whose parents have died of AIDS, asking for a mere $1,300 which included a coffee table for $85.
          Listening to the faint voice that reminded me I still had “ears to hear”, I laid my foil wrapped kebab down on my coffee table and got out my wallet.




Wednesday, May 2, 2012

The Half Life


Scientists know something about life, right? Like, the building blocks of life and the breaking down of it, too? The big guns, the nuclear physicists, believe they can tell how old something is by what they call the half-life through the decaying process. In its simplest explanation, the half-life is "the age determining factor via radioactive elements breaking down." How right they are. Thirty-six, going on thirty-seven… I’m feeling the disintegration already.

The scientists’ original thought of this aging process (aka carbon dating) was to determine how old the universe is, starting with planet Earth. If they could prove that it is millions of years old versus mere thousands and the universe billions, it could make the Western religions’ idea of a personal god irrelevant.
          
This morning I am surrounded by my laptop, a book on scientific discoveries that point to a creator of a finite universe and another book by an atheist saying religion and Mother Teresa are horrendous frauds. But while I sip my coffee, I'm wondering how I’m going to shower today before my mammogram and not get my stitches wet from yesterday’s mole removal for a biopsy.
          
Yesterday, a skin plug to see if the tiny dot under my arm is cancer. Today, a firm squeeze that brings tears to the eyes just to make sure the painful lumps in my chests are only cysts, if not glands. It would seem two different cancer tests back to back would suggest otherwise, but overall, my physical well-being is just that—well.  But something of a different nature told me yesterday that not all was all right.
          
As my back felt the cold paper from the opening of the apron, the nerves immediately set in. Tightening of the chest, the short breaths and then the welling of the wet stuff around the eyes. I wanted to cry. 

“Just take a deep breath and find something to focus on,” I told myself. The doctor told me the numbing shot would be more painful than the actual minuscule procedure. It was. I yelped and clenched until the burning sensation went away.
          
However, there was another pain--something I wasn't expecting. I had played it off as no big deal simply because the mole was so small, neglecting the very reason for getting it done at all had the potential of a larger picture, but I was alone. 
          
The breathing helped as well as the thought of not wanting to look silly crying during the tiniest incision I couldn't even feel. Still, I had to look away and focus on the anatomy posters while biting my lip to gain composer.
          
At this point, the doctor finished prepping my arm. He pulled off his gloves to do something else before putting on new ones for the incision. He checked if I was doing ok. I asked if I could use my phone as a distraction. He got it for me mentioning something about Angry Birds. I told him I couldn't play it with one hand, sadly, so I pulled up the news instead.
          
Scrolling down through the politics, I saw some jokes comedian Jimmy Kimmel had used at a White House Dinner for Obama, “Remember when the country rallied around you in hopes of a better tomorrow?... That was hilarious.” “Ouch!” My doctor looked up. “Oh sorry, not you. I can’t feel a thing,” and continued to scroll through the news.
          
“200 Missing or Dead”... a ferry in India had sunk...  The doctor mentioned something about my phone being a distraction, just not maybe a very uplifting one, as he tied two stitches off. 
          
The nurse came in shortly to clean and bandage me up as I continued to read the news. “The new World Trade Center is going to be the tallest skyscraper in New York.” “Huh. Really...” she responds blankly.

If I had asked my mom to come with me she would have said, “Of course, honey.” She happens to be enjoying a much-needed getaway to Mexico this week. As I hear the rainstorm outside my window, I'm truly glad for her. But while she’s gone, I’m in the middle of a divorce, my girlfriend is on the other side of the country, and my other friends didn’t even know I was having a biopsy. It’s just not something I’d post on Facebook.
          
I held back from praying wondering what to even pray for and just fought feeling sorry for myself, and yet...

In the midst of my internal struggle, the word peace came to mind.
          
After the nurse left, I sat up on the crinkly parchment paper and realized... no… actually, truly empathized with my mother for the very first time. 

The melanoma was removed when we were children, but the double mastectomy was when we were adults, and each of her four children hardly to be seen. There was also the time she broke her foot, which as since turned arthritic. And then there was the time she was hit so hard, the minivan rolled two and half times leaving her hanging upside down in her own blood. Then a few years ago, her husband of nearly 40 years died of cancer.
          
There I was, almost in tears for being alone over a speck on my arm, and that before knowing what it was. 

Who did she cry out to when nobody was there in her unfathomable pain and loneliness? Her Western Christian God.
          
I understand the anger most atheists have at religion, particularly the Christian religions. The fear of coming out and admitting I was a lesbian in the Christian world which often believes I can and should be changed almost killed me. Some gays raised in the church, some not—both indignant at the church's response to who we are and often atheists for that reason. Who we are...
          
Who am I? I am part of the gay community who cannot shake the intellectual, philosophical, emotional, and spiritual necessity for something greater than humanity. 
Standing in the middle of this half-life, caught in-between two worlds colliding, all I want is to be at peace with myself and to know I am not alone, and that whoever I am... becoming... or dying... I am not just matter, but that I matter. I’m learning that part of owning this philosophy is to hold on to what mattered to me before. My faith. Even if I don’t have it all figured out, it's always been a huge part of my life. Sadly, too much of it was religious. And yet, recognizing that as I get ready for my mammogram and pray for comfort as I hold the tears of loneliness back again, I can still appreciate what one great physicist said, even if he didn’t want to believe in a personal god... "Science without religion is lame, religion without science is blind.” –Albert Einstein.

Mom and Me
(swinging at The Event of a Thread http://www.armoryonpark.org/programs_events/detail/ann_hamilton)
Emiko Iwata Hall - Brooklyn, NY 



P.S. TEST RESULTS ARE FINE

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