“April is the cruelest month.”
So begins The Waste Land,
by T.S. Eliot. It happens to be one of my all-time favorite poems. And, sadly,
the opening line felt all too appropriate for April 2013.
I’m not going to tell you how I feel about the Boston
Marathon bombings. Enough has been said already, and much of it by people more eloquent
than me. Suffice it to say that I don’t feel anything different than what most
people have felt about it. It was a terrible tragedy.
As keenly as I felt the bombings, however, I was even more
devastated by the fertilizer plant explosion in West, Texas. Proximity might
have something to do with it. West is only an hour or so down the freeway from
where I live. I’ve driven through it multiple times on my way to Austin and
back.
It’s more than that though. As awful as Boston was, West was
an even bigger tragedy, in my opinion. More people died, for one. Half the town
was destroyed, for another. And the biggest employer for the area is gone now,
probably for good. How is West to recover from that? Even worse, it was
entirely preventable. If the people who owned and operated the West Fertilizer Co.
had simply followed the safety regulations, the explosion likely wouldn’t have
happened.
Where is the outrage for this story? I feel it. I want to
know the names of the people responsible for this. I want them to face criminal
charges. I want it to be all over the news. But news isn’t news in America any
longer. It’s entertainment. And I think that makes me angrier than anything.
Even closer to home, my brother sent me four boxes of old
family photos in April. You can read a little bit more about that here if
you’re interested. When I finished going through the first box, my husband
asked me if I was happy to finally have my family’s stuff. The question struck
me as odd. I wasn’t happy. At the time, I felt sad, but later it
morphed into something more like bittersweet.
Looking through this stuff can be painful. Nearly everyone
in these pictures is dead now. Many of them, I never got a chance to know at
all. Many more, I never got around to knowing as well as I should have. And to
me, that’s sad. On the other hand, it’s been fascinating to learn more about
the lives of my maternal grandparents, who are largely a mystery to me. One
night, after flipping through a scrapbook of my grandmother’s, it suddenly
occurred to me how alike we were. Most of the scrapbook was made up of bits of
poetry that she’d collected, works that had touched her or that she had enjoyed.
I used to collect poetry too when I was about the same age (early 20s).
Suddenly, I felt connected to her, in a way that I never had
before. It was a good feeling, one that I cherish.
So April wasn’t all bad. We saw a good turn in our financial
situation, which we’re capitalizing on. With diligence, I think the husband and I will be largely debt free
within a couple of years. And while I still haven’t been writing, I did start
revising a previous manuscript. The husband and I came up with a plan for
publishing. I’m working toward implementing it, but I’ll talk more about that
next month, when I’ll hopefully have more to report.
All in all, I think it’s safe to say that I’ve been feeling
pretty philosophical this month. In Texas, the weather has been a little wild:
80 degrees one day, 50 the next. It seems as though the rest of life has
mirrored this: one day a national tragedy, the next personal triumph. It’s been
an emotional rollercoaster, but I’m not interested in getting off of it any
time soon.
2 comments:
My "cruelest month" is February, so I'm good by April. But Boston was on my mind too. Boston will be fine, it's a get-up-and-keep-swinging type of place, but it's too bad it happened there.
Did you find that you and your grandmother shared taste in any poems? I love looking at old scrapbooks in antique stores. It would be fun to have a family member's mementos.
I haven't looked too closely yet, but not really from what I can tell. I did make note of a lot of religious stuff. I never collected much religious poetry even when I was religious.
She also seemed really obsessed with marriage, which is odd to me. I know it has something to do with when and where she was raised, but I just never felt pressure like that to get married.
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