This spring is different.
Not only are we busting out of darkness and cold, like all northerners
who winter at home, we’re leaving behind the year-long isolation of a global pandemic.
I approach St. Patrick’s Day with relief and joy. After shaving my beard and digging out my
favorite green shirt I tell myself “I can do the rest of winter standing on my
head.”
Let it snow, it’ll be gone in a day. Screw the snowblower, the cosmos is taking
care of us. Every day our hemisphere
tilts closer to the sun, lengthening the days at a rapid clip. You can’t stop it. Take that winter.
Every spring is a fresh start but this one is transformational. I am deep into spring cleaning, approaching
it with a vengeance.
After a year of hunkering down in the shack, with visitors numbering
less than the fingers on one hand, I accumulated all kinds of things. In the house, we threw away things we were trapped
with for years, but in the shack, the piles grew.
Most of it was articles clipped from newspapers that still show up on our driveway. Others were digitally copied, pasted, and printed from the internet. I’m trying to beat this addiction to ink and paper, to be satisfied with computer files pasted to my desktop, but it dies slowly. Something about seeing words while holding them in my hands comforts me. I laid them out on my futon and tried to organize them. Lots defy categorization.
Why are they there?
Each was a potential blog post.
One day, for a brief moment each was considered write worthy. Now, I’m not so sure. I set the wastebasket close, determined to ruthlessly
toss them. But I realize I can’t possibly
let go of some without at least a mention.
An eight-word headline from the Chicago Tribune:
Survivors hanuted by loss of smell
and taste
Hanuted? The Chicago
Tribune editors missed the misspelling of the word haunted in an article about
the effects of coronavirus IN THE HEADLINE?
I quickly consulted my friend, a retired newspaper editor.
“That kind of mistake occurs more often than you think. Miss a misspelled word once and you miss it
every time. And in fairness, the more
important copy, the copy that contains the most errors, is typically in the body
of the article. Headlines tend to be
overlooked. Once upon a time, several
technologies ago, the typesetters would catch those errors. Not so now.
Expect more. It happens.”
I found two pieces by Tribune columnist John Kass. I don’t even like John Kass. Let me rephrase that. I don’t like his politics. But as a writer, he still gets it done. Connects with his reader. One article from August 2018 was a review of a
great movie called “The Rider” by a Chinese
director I’d never heard of named Chloe Zhao, who recently directed
“Nomadland.” Based on his recommendation
I watched it. It’s a simple story filmed
in the Badlands of a young man changed forever by his experience as a rodeo
rider. Simplicity can be hard hitting
and emotional, as this movie was for me.
The second Kass article was a March 5, 2021 tribute to a
colleague who passed away, yet also somehow about fishing, lent and prayer, and
the damned screens in front of our face (like this one ironically) that now dominate
our lives. It was a piece that wandered yet
strangely came together in the end. Both
articles reminded me that when we stop thinking of our political differences
and allow ourselves to be quiet, admitting what we feel, we create ways to find
what we have in common.
I could not throw away a short 350-word article about Dion
Callaway, the California man who lost his prosthetic leg while skydiving. Ironically, he lost his God-given leg while skydiving
also. He shattered his heel attempting a
high-speed parachute landing and after a year of rehab and complications opted
to have the leg amputated below the knee. He resumed skydiving as soon as possible.
As luck would have it, he jumped from 10,000 feet without
realizing there was a tear in the compression sleeve that keeps his stump and
the prosthesis connected. Air filled the
sleeve, the artificial leg was torn away, and it sailed to earth who knows
where. Callaway tried to follow the
falling leg but lost track. He eventually
landed, successfully, on one leg. Immediately he launched a four-hour search on crutches through Russian
River vineyards to find the missing leg. No luck.
Turns out his leg blew a half-mile south into a lumber
yard. It was discovered and turned over
to the local sheriff, who asked around, and was connected to Callaway by the
airport from where he jumped. The artificial
leg was in perfect condition. Dion Callaway resumed skydiving immediately, this
time with his name and contact information plastered to the device.
I identified with the story because like Dion I have a bad
leg due to an injury. There was a time I
considered having it taken off but was talked out of it by physical therapists
and surgeons. Mostly though I clipped the
article because I liked Dion’s spunk, as represented by this quote about the
sensation of jumping out of airplanes and falling to earth.
“It’s a sensation of floating, and it’s a lot of fun. You’re up there with your friends, playing
around two miles up. It’s like you’re Peter Pan.”
I saved no less than twelve pieces about America and its four
year far-right policy shift against immigrants and refugees. Included were stories featuring national
actors who exploited the issue for political reasons; Jeff Sessions, Steve King
of Iowa, White House speechwriter and policy advisor Stephen Miller, and his infamous
boss.
I saved stories from good reporters who went to the border
and recorded the awful results their policies created, including 450 migrant
parents deported without their children.
Every time I tried to write about the story it changed. It deserves to be a book, not a blog
piece. But what is most needed is comprehensive
immigration reform and a conclusion to the mess we’ve created around immigration
issues. We need to write an ending to
that story for which America can be proud.
I saved a bunch of articles about things I could, and may
still, do (although I admit prospects appear dim some days.) Imagining them got me through some of the
worst pandemic days. I’ll sum them up in
bullet points. Call it a fantasy To-Do
list.
·
Amtrak’s Writer Residency Program once offered free
round-trip tickets on 15 long-distance routes to authors. Unsold sleeper car spaces were given to writers
in hopes they would share their experiences on social media and elsewhere.
·
A Rick Steves European tour of artist’s residences,
including that of composer Edward Grieg’s one-room studio on a Norwegian fiord,
Rembrandt’s studio in Amsterdam, and Salvador Dali’s studio overlooking the
port in Cadaques, Spain.
·
A scheme for making small homes out of cargo
shipping containers.
·
The annual Ernest Hemingway look-alike contest at
Sloppy Joe’s bar in Key West.
·
Companies that hire retirees to shuttle cars to
vacation destinations for senior citizens complete with paid one-way return
airline tickets.
·
Abandoned railroad corridors turned into bike
paths across Illinois.
·
The growing trends for more natural human burial
and other alternatives to the traditional disposal of human remains, including
composting.
Owing to my former life in social work, I save various articles
on issues that affect young people and their families including the rise of suicide rates among not only young
people but all of us during the pandemic, the looming housing crisis, food
insecurity, how the sex offender registry negatively impacts young offenders
for the remainder of their lives, and the condition of our juvenile detention
and correction facilities. These issues live
in darkness as a forgotten world. Any
news item that claws its way into the media and our consciousness is
notable.
And I am always on the lookout for news about Marilyn
Hartman. For Chicago Tribune reporters,
Marilyn Hartman is the gift that never ends.
I encountered Marilyn for the first time in a February 2018
Trib article titled “Serial stowaway grows agitated at court hearing.” It was an account of her appearance the previous
day after being arrested at O’Hare Airport twice in two weeks. Her agitation stemmed from the way her court
appointed lawyer was answering the judge’s questions. When the judge asked if Marilyn had family the
lawyer said yes.
“No, I don’t!” Marilyn protested loudly.
When the judge later asked if Marilyn was under the care of
a medical professional, the lawyer began to reply in the negative and Marilyn interjected
“Yes!!”
Facts are often in dispute in matters regarding Marilyn
Hartman. Her career as a serial stowaway
was first officially noticed in 2014 when she made it through the San Francisco
Airport and onto a plane bound for Hawaii.
She was busted when the real ticketholder tried to claim her seat. But according to Marilyn, she hopped her
first plane in 2002.
“The first time I was able to make it through I made it to
Copenhagen,” she said. “The second time
I flew into Paris.”
Only Marilyn knows the true extent of her adventures. And for the most part, she is not talking.
At that February 2018 court hearing in Chicago, her fourth
in two weeks, the judge ordered her three separate times to stay away from
O’Hare Airport. And for good measure he
ordered her not to go to Midway either.
Just a month earlier Marilyn managed to get by British Airways ticket
agents and a Customs and Border protection officer to occupy an empty seat and
fly to London’s Heathrow Airport where she was arrested and returned. TSA began investigating how she was able to
do so but came up with no clear answers.
In a later hearing the judge ordered Hartman released on her
own recognizance but ordered psychiatric treatment. In the kind of statement journalists cannot
possibly pass up it was reported that the same judge told Marilyn’s attorney
the following for the court record.
“This is no pun intended for your client, but she is a
flight risk given her number of offenses.”
The number of successful trips Marilyn has managed to take
is unknown, but she has been arrested 22 times.
She has been involved with both the criminal justice and the mental
health systems, placed on probation, labeled homeless, and housed in various residential
settings.
Electronic monitoring has been especially useful. Just Tuesday of this week while writing this
blog post, Marilyn popped up again when she was reported missing from the group
facility where she has lived without incident for the past year and a
half. Her ankle bracelet, serving as a
tracking device, revealed a straight path to O’Hare airport. They alerted authorities and she was
apprehended near Terminal 1. She suffered yet another relapse in her obsession
with airports and flying.
Marilyn has given various reasons for her behavior to the
press and calls herself no criminal mastermind.
She told CBS Channel 2 in Chicago that “I have never been able to board
a plane by myself. I was always let
through. I mean I was able to go through
the security line without a boarding pass.
She has claimed to be the victim of a worldwide conspiracy
to harass her, and once stated she suffers from “whistle blower trauma syndrome
that makes me feel the need to get on a plane and go away.” At other times she has admitted she suffers
from bipolar disorder, a diagnosis she resisted for a long time. She says she was depressed when she made her
stowaway attempts.
Reporters who have followed her arrests attribute the
success of her evasive maneuvers to her ability to blend into a crowd as a
seemingly harmless, elderly white woman. Whatever the case, neither law enforcement,
the courts, or our mental health system have found a way to stop her
behavior.
It is too bad Marilyn Hartman is fascinated with
airplanes. We’ve grown twitchy about
people sneaking onto our airplanes and cannot tolerate it. If Marilyn was fond of trains and could
write about her travels, perhaps Amtrack would give her a standing ticket to
take an empty seat on those scenic routes they offer when she has the urge to
travel. But it is not ground travel that
fills Marilyn’s fantasy, its being in the sky.
Maybe someone could introduce Marilyn Hartman to Dion
Callaway, the one-legged skydiver. Dion could
teach Marilyn to skydive, acquaint her with the euphoria he feels while floating
in the air two miles up, and they could both get what they so hunger for from life.
As it is sometimes said in auction notices, my collection of
clippings includes “other items too numerous to mention.” Now that I’ve saved most of them in a blog, I
feel better about throwing them away. There
will be more. Always more. Thoreau’s advice was “simplify, simplify,
simplify.” But you never know when an article
will come in handy. Heck, one day you
could write about it.
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