Middle Aged White Lady Mourns Prince

A couple of hours ago I learned that Prince had died.  I stepped away from the extended family vacation I am in the midst of to just catch my breath and noodle on Facebook for a moment or two.  Immediately I saw the news that Prince was dead at 57.  Prince.  Dead.  It seems inconceivable to me. Surprising even myself, I burst into tears.  Messy tears that no one around me understood.

When Bowie died a few months ago, my Facebook feed was littered with tributes and condolences.  Friends were shocked and mourning.  The death of Bowie was a loss, but not personal to me.  I felt for my friends, but it was their loss, not mine.  I would never have qualified as a Bowie fan, though respected his artistry.  But now, in the midst of my own grief, I get it.  I get how the death of a stranger, someone you never met or spoke with, could wreck you.

I have always adored Prince and his music.  I came to it at a young age — 13 was when I discovered him.  An impressionable youth, I was, and Prince was always one to impress.  He was raw and joyful, bodacious, fiercely talented, dirty sexy (as my friend Julie just described him), so damn himself, singular.  His words were dangerous, his music complex and complicated.  My 13 year old self was in way over my head, but I loved it, all of it.

Tipper Gore was having heart attacks about Darling Nikki grinding away, while young kids everywhere were asking, “What’s grinding?”  Yep.  Prince was a defacto sex ed teacher to me and so many others.  The man was sex personified.  Just crazy sexy.  His eyes, his high heels, his lycra pants, his tiny waist, his winks and pearls just screamed naughty.

Aside from the content of his lyrics, though, something about the man’s guitar just sent me.  I could listen to him riff for hours and many a day in high school, I did.  His music transported me to places I would never get to without him.  Cool places.  Funky places.  Tough places.  His guitar was my first passport to destinations outside my suburban bedroom.

When someone does that for you, when their art has the power to take you places, they become yours in a way.  You claim them.  I am a middle aged white lady, and I claim Prince as my own.  And yes, I mourn him.  I know from grief, and what I am feeling in these moments is grief, pure and potent.

Prince Rogers Nelson.  June 7, 1958 - April 21, 2016
Prince Rogers Nelson. June 7, 1958 – April 21, 2016

It was Prince’s words who got me through my first real breakup.  I was in college and it was one of those “you’re gonna get married, or you’re gonna break up” relationships, and, well, we opted for the latter.  But I was still ripped and shattered.  Prince fed my heartbreak like no other.  His words helped put me back together.

Oh, Prince.  I am now feeling immensely grateful to my husband for purchasing third row tickets for his Chicago stadium show a few years ago. He had the stage set up with cocktail tables all around it, the stadium seats behind us.  Damn, those were amazing seats.  I wrote about that show HERE.  I was surprised by two things that night:  1) just how itty bitty Prince was — probably not much taller than five feet; and 2) how joyful he was, how much fun he had on that stage, with a total lack of pretense.

The power of joy in Prince’s music is almost as integral to it as its sexiness. When you sing along to “Baby, I’m a Star,” you believe it, you become a star, if only for a few minutes in your kitchen while cooking dinner.  Prince made me connect with that sexy motherfucking star inside myself.  And, better yet, he made that sexy, motherfucking star in me as accessible as the on/off switch to the stereo.

What a gift.

Right now I am remembering sitting in a dark theater a few years ago.  A friend invited me to see the Joffrey Ballet’s restaging of Billboards, a monumental juxtaposition of ballet set to Prince’s music.  Billboards was commissioned in the early 1990s, but I had never seen it.  Part of me was heartbroken sitting in that dark theater, as it was Chicago’s Auditorium Theater we were sitting in — the last stage that Donna ever danced on.  But the lights dimmed and the music started, I was transported, as I so often am listening to Prince’s music.

The performance ended in a resplendent performance of “Baby, I’m a Star” where guests from the audience were invited up onto the stage to dance alongside the lithe, sinuous bodies of the ballerinas.  It’s a hokey move, to invite the audience to dance with you, not often seen with one of America’s premiere ballet companies, but it worked because, well, Prince.  I wrote a status update about it in the moments after I learned the news of Prince’s death this afternoon:

I felt transformed and transported, fixed, unbroken, whole again, as a theater full of humans were full to brimming with the joy of his music and the dancers’ bodies just clashed and celebrated and moved, so brilliant and perfect and epic. Baby, I’m a star, Prince told us, and we all were. He made us believe.

The joy and the life in that combination of dance and Prince’s music and the utter democracy of that moment allowed me to transcend my grief.  I was grateful to be alive, so happy to be, to live and move and feel and breathe.

Thank you, Prince, for that moment.

I salute and mourn the artistry and humanity of one so singular as you.

 

 

Me and My Elmo Feet

At 46, I should be beyond having an identify crisis, right?  I mean, come on, that stage of life should have been put to rest along with my Bonne Bell flavored lip glosses and Jean Nate bath spray.  Having an identity crisis is so 20th century.  Now that I am a modern 21st century woman, I should have transcended all my junior high insecurities.

Alas, I have not.

I blame my new Ugg boots.  They’re red.  I found them one day while scrolling through Facebook.  A woman, a stranger to me, was selling them on a virtual yard sale in a nearby town.  $15 in mint condition.  They just weren’t her style, she explained.  Hmmmm.  It took, oh, all of about four seconds to click on the comment, “Interested!” I was the first one.  Those Ugg boots were mine.  SCORE.

The preferred footwear of my mid-life crisis.
The preferred footwear of my mid-life crisis.

I picked them up and they were amazing.  As comfortable as I had heard them described through all those years when celebrities like Kate Hudson wore them to pick up her dry cleaning on the pages of Us Magazine.  I was finally like the stars who are just like us, only ten years later.  I loved them.  Soon I was wearing them to school pick-up and the grocery store and on errands and trips to the park. How had I lived all my life without Uggs?  Well, because I’m cheap and don’t like to spend money on trends, that’s why.

But one day last week, in the midst of a perfect storm, an identity crisis set in.  It started when I was walking hand-in-hand with my toddler while wearing those Uggs.  We were at my older son’s school and walking past a small Elmo doll displayed on the front desk.  I started chatting with my boy in my best Elmo voice, “Hi! I’m Mama, and my feet look like Elmo’s!  They are red and big and kind of furry.  Do you like Mama’s Elmo feet?”  And, at precisely that moment, another mom walked past, overhearing our silly exchange.  She smiled, a little, and kept walking.  Fast and purposefully.  In clean black heels, clickity clacking down the hall.

This mom was serious.  Determined.  Wearing a suit with a brooch.  She had on a shell under a blazer, for criminy’s sake.  She was not wearing Uggs that make her feet look like Elmo’s.  I had seen her around at school meetings.  She was the kind of gal that carries herself with great comportment.  Dignified, adult, mature.  In other words, she is a grown ass woman.

Sheepishly, I looked down at my red Elmo feet.  There is very little that is dignified or mature about red Ugg boots.  Suddenly, and with visceral force, I was miserable. I felt like a jerk, silly, the insecurities bubbling up all around me.  In that moment I hated those red Ugg boots, comfort be damned.  In that moment, I hated a lot of things.

I hated that I wear “soft pants” approximately six out of every seven days.  I hated that my most meaningful, adult exchanges occur through a keyboard.  I hated that I shower much less than I would if I saw more people through the day.  I hated that I eat too much chocolate to comfort myself.  I hated that I will just keep getting older and older.  I hated that I didn’t know what I was making for dinner.  I hated that I was so tired, with bags under my eyes.

Haters be hatin’ yo.

The bad feelings and insecurities that were unleashed in that moment stuck with me for days.  I confided them to a friend who, gratefully, said all the right things.  “How do you know that woman didn’t wish she were wearing red Ugg boots?  How do you know she doesn’t curse the pantyhose she surely wears to the office?  How do you know she wasn’t pining to be silly with a young toddler, holding hands, and giggling through her day?”

The truth is that I didn’t.  The truth is that the other gal didn’t matter in the big scheme of things — she was a convenient symbol I used to identify and project my own unhappiness and insecurities.  The truth is that my life looks nothing like I imagined it might twenty or even ten years ago, but then again, whose does?

Those silly $15 red Ugg boots were running a number on me something fierce.

Working from home with young children is a hard gig.  I don’t take care of myself the way that I should.  I have gained weight and am feeling that physically and emotionally.  I live every day in grief, surrounded by the most loving, silly boys I could ever wish for.  My days are equal parts joy and sorrow and that can be exhausting.

Gratefully, the identity crisis brought on by my Elmo feet seems to have lightened in the last few days.  I remember how I assigned the title of “grown ass woman” to the mom I envied, and then realized, for better or worse, how grown ass I am myself.  I’ve buried a child, provided care for two parents in the last year of their lives, adopted an infant and negotiated the complexities of an open adoption, am acting as the executor of my father’s estate, switched careers, keep my kids basically fed and clothed and safe and vaccinated.

Yeah, it’s true.  I am, indeed, a grown ass woman.  Who just happens to feel more comfortable, at least for now, in red Ugg boots and soft pants.

All the rest I can work on.  I can shower more frequently.  I can step away from the chocolate.  I can get to the gym.  I can do all those things.  And I should.  And I will.  Because grown ass women take care of their business when it needs taking care of.  Watch me.

Telephone Calls and Address Books

I just got off an unexpected phone call.  (Sheesh.  Millenials won’t even know what that sentence means.  Anyways.)  One of my Mom’s dear friends, a neighbor from across the street when I was a child, called to wish my family a Happy New Year.  Mrs. E. was a dear woman in 1975, so it stands to reason she would be just as dear 40 years later.

We chatted about our holidays and how this year’s version of the plague has descended upon our respective homes.  Lots of sniffles and minor fevers.  She asked if we had received the Christmas card she sent and she was so glad to get ours.  And she was the single person this year who said to me, “I know the holidays must be hard for you.  I think of your Donna all the time.”  God bless her.  In just those few words, I felt seen, acknowledged, and held all at the same time.

The call was lovely.

She wanted to send cards to my sisters, too, so asked to check the addresses she had.  A couple of times Mrs. E. asked for my patience as she flipped through her address book.  She talked about needing a bigger one, but that she was so partial to the one she had been using for years, she didn’t want to switch.  I laughed and told her how my niece poked fun at my good, old fashioned address book the last time she was over.  Mine was purchased at Urban Outfitters in the mid 90s and has a stylized telephone on the cover.  It was ironic 20 years ago.  Now, it is just outdated, a marker of the past, the way things used to be.

Address Book

I have more in common with an 80+ year old lady than a 20+ year old lady. Yep, I sure do.

Mrs. E. and I remarked about how our address books had a lot of crossed out names and addresses over the years.  For my, it was friends and family moving.  For her, it was friends and family dying.  That’s how it goes.  And a list of addresses cataloged on a computer will never allow you to flip through the entries and remember those folks.

This year I recommitted to my old address book.  I had saved all the envelopes from Christmas cards received the past few years and I methodically went through each one in November to either add or amend an entry in the address book.  I have a list of addresses on my computer, sure, but I never look at it, as who wants to sit down and cue up a computer just to check a quick address?  But too many times over the past few years I have stopped sending a note or a proper thank you because of just that — I didn’t have or want to take the few minutes to turn on the computer.

After my edits, my address book is a bit fuller this year and a whole lot more accurate.  A few more crossed out entries, too.  I hope the time it took to update means that I spend a bit more time communicating the old fashioned way this year.  Cards and calls.  So retro.  No irony.