Monday, June 26, 2017

Because we're Siren + Serene




This is something my sister made, a portrait of the two of us in 2010. We came up with the duo nickname “Siren Serene." She being the exciting siren, and I the soothing, serene one- and we’d say it in a loud, enthusiastic way.
“Siren seRENE!”
Emphasis on the calmer name, ironically. Like a DJ making a shout-out from his or her turntable. Very weird, very silly, very us.
Mind you, I’m not always that serene. I don’t always keep my temper or hold my tongue and she is not always a vixen, wild child with “Sabrosa” as her alter-ego or her “daughter” as she puts it. She is quite capable of serenity, of exuding quiet, sound reason and maintaining her composure. But for our general dynamic, we came up with this and it fits. We like the double “S” and how similar those words sound, look, and are spelled- even in Spanish - Sirena Serena.
Today and for the first time really, in a permanent way, as opposed to a vacation or “away at college” way, she is leaving New York and flying out to Florida to live with her girlfriend Sahsha and to begin her new life- so of course I'm now compelled to take stock here and unpack the ol’ sisterly memories…
They’re swirling in my head all over the place and it’s hard to harness this into a lucid, linear prose- I was almost going to make this a poem. But the prose is creeping its way in, I guess my desire to be coherent and cut and dry is taking over.
When Mom told me she was pregnant with her in 1990, I wasn’t happy about it. I was 13 and already used to the idea of being an only child after I stopped wishing for a sibling at 11. At 11 my first baby cousin was born and he lived upstairs from us. In the following 2 years, 2 more baby cousins were born, living upstairs and downstairs from us. This I later learned, caused my mom to have baby fever and “tricked” my dad into having another one. She consoled him after a devastating Celtic game when they lost___.
When she told me she was pregnant, I felt as though this was a terribly careless accident on their part, just like I was. But maybe that concerned expression on her face was her worrying about how I was going to take it. Initially I dreaded at how our world was gonna change from hereon in. But with time, I got over all that and started to embrace this new blessing as I told my friends in junior high and they shared my excitement, asking me what names I’d like.
Mom and I named her Christine. Since Dad chose my name back in ‘77 he stepped aside from this process the second time around. But he still told us to nix “Christina” because it would get swallowed up with our last name which begins with an “A”. I liked “Dolores” but my mother didn’t want a name that’s associated with “pain and suffering”, what "dolores" literally translates to. The name Christine or Christina is after a relative dear to my mother who died young.
Christine always felt her name was too plain and never really liked it. That is, until we saw the 1983 John Carpenter movie of the same name. She was 20 at the time and that’s how old the car in the film happens to be- a 1958 Plymouth Fury brought back to hellish life in 1978. We didn’t even think it was going to be good. We put it on as a joke, to hate-watch, or make fun of it- but we raved over “Christine”, and that’s when she began to really own and flaunt her name at last.
When she was a baby I remember looking at her crawl on our parent's bed and thinking cool, another Puerto Rican-Dominican girl in the family, I won’t be the only one! When taking her out in her stroller, people would think I was another teenage mom and that she was my son- because she didn’t always like having barrettes and hair thingies in her short, curly hair.
“What a cute little boy!” they would tell me.
There were times I wasn’t exactly thrilled with all this, especially that time when I was on my way to take my public speaking final and I had to pick her up from school instead because she didn't feel well. I was almost at the corner of my block when Mamina called out after me from her 3rd story window-

"¡Tennille! ¡Ve y busca Christine de la escuela, la enfermera llamó! ¡Apúrate!"

There were times when we fought- verbally, physically, and affected each other emotionally, mentally, you name it.  There’s the fact that I allowed her to grow up too fast, to hang out with my friends, watching ‘my’ movies, and letting her stay home from school a little bit too much for her own good. Mom’s death hit us each in our own ways. It had me scramble to become more maternal than I ever would have been, scramble being the keyword here. Mom’s death is the major void that we bond over with as well. We agreed that because of this that we became closer than we probably originally would have been.
Continuing my childhood tradition of making up song and movie parodies with my cousins Yvonne and Jacqui when I visited them in Connecticut, I automatically passed that on to Christine. We came up with "Dominican Idiot"- a Green Day "American Idiot" album parody song for song, line for line that started out as a good natured or not-so good natured poke at our alienation with our own Dominican family/culture that unintentionally turned out to be sad and serious towards the end, "Jesus Christ, Superstars!", possibly our best one- again song for song, line for line, "The Twilight Hood"- kind of dumb but so fun to make, and a "Valley of the Dolls" trailer parody which she managed to post on YouTube
Here are some of the bloopers

We constantly inspired and entertained each other with our own brilliance and outrageous ‘stupidity’ for lack a better word. Sometimes with a tape recorder, sometimes a digital camcorder, sometimes a webcam, sometimes just pen and paper.

One early memory I have that I’m pretty fond of is me blasting some music in my room one night and encouraging her to dance- clapping, cheering her on, lending her my maracas... her twirling in a ruffle dress that Mamina made, and I just wanted to celebrate her essence that night, her “girl power” which is what she liked as a kid- Spice Girls’ and their girl power. She was 6 when the movie ‘Spice World’ came out and she liked Baby spice the most. I felt meh about them in my post adolescence but saw the appeal and how much it meant to her and girls her age, the generation after mine.
The show “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” also came on my radar and I liked it enough but really sensed the opportunity for Christine to get into it, so we tuned in almost every Tuesday night. Remember those baby cousins I mentioned who lived up and downstairs from us? Well, being that Christine was the youngest of the 4, she became their easy target. I think watching Buffy every week served as an empowering tool, little by little, slowly but surely. Our dad was too mellow to aggressively come to our defense, a little too “live and let live” for our taste sometimes. So aside from me, who was too busy being angsty, not always around, going through my own anxieties and depression, she had Buffy. Even if it was just a TV celluloid on the WB, even if she was a thin, white, blonde, middle upper class girl we couldn’t relate to much, flipping around, possessing over-the-top, unattainable, superhuman strength, she was there- for her- every week. And when the show reached the season where Buffy goes away to college and the camera did a slow, zoom out shot of her new, overwhelming campus in one episode, dreams of ‘dorm life’ hit me- they hit me for her, it was too late for me.
“Yo, Chris!” I yelled when I saw that shot.
That's the kind of school I want you to try to get into later! Not commuting somewhere around here and coming back home every day like I do!” she crinkled her nose and shook her head in disapproval at this.
“Strive for a really great school, we’ll worry about the money later… but aim for this, go and be an independent, young adult... you can...you can have all that!” The idea excited her too, my enthusiasm and the picture I was painting was infectious. Christine not only went away to college, but got accepted to her first choice, Vassar, one that she applied for early.
“Yo, I heard you got into a good-ass school!” one of our cousins exclaimed when he found out, genuinely impressed.
When they called her name at graduation four years later, I absolutely cheered and cried with joy and tightly hugged our Titi Janis for a long time.
To throw our age gap out there again, as of this year, I am 40 and she is 26. She couldn’t wait to grow up and “catch up to me” so that we could be grown ups together, not taking into account that when she got older, I’d be older too. Not cool old anymore, just aging, old-old. She told me of this realization one night in my living room when my kids were asleep, and we kind of laughed about it.
“Tennille. You used to be cool.” she’d mockingly say when I started having kids and getting excited about little baby things, having favorite characters on baby shows and thinking about lyrics to children’s songs a little too much, or getting excited about a new baby product that would make my life easier. When I grew more and more ignorant of the new, cool things and people trending in our pop culture.
She jokingly threw the term “pregnancy brain” at me until it started to get to me and I asked her to please stop.
“You’re literally insulting me (my intelligence) for having a baby and becoming a mother” I pointed out.
Not just her, but anyone who uses that term a lot to justify a person spacing out, flaking out, or forgetting something. Even though the concept is scientifically legit, sometimes I’m just not that smart on something on my own, having nothing to do with being a mom, or I’ll forget things just like I used to do before I became a mom. She totally agreed, understood, and stopped using the term.
When she was a teenager (and tougher now that we moved to Brooklyn, not hesitating to push back at the cousins who picked on her as a child in Queens), I sometimes wondered how someone so headstrong would fare in a romantic relationship, being someone’s girlfriend, having a boyfriend. When she came out to me as bi at 17 or 18, I understood things, her, way more. And she’s schooled me a lot over the years with queer culture, identity, disability rights, discrimination, internalized racism, benevolent sexism... she’s a millennial with a Tumblr SJW sensibility and say what you want to about that, but overall, all in all, I’m calling that a compliment.
“You raised me,” she once pointed out through texting when she was away in college and I was freaking out over motherhood, arguments with Joe, and my attacking self-doubt.
“And look at how well I turned out!” she wrote, trying to console me.
Yeah I thought to myself, but you’re also “damaged” (as she puts it), and anxiety-ridden just like I am.
Granted. All that’s true, in a way/shape/form. BUT she’s also been able to maintain strong, healthy friendships, holds down jobs well, is ambitious, hard-working, respectful, mad creative and talented… and has a heart like no other.
When I was 15 and had to stay at the psychiatric adolescent unit in Holliswood, I was able to have my family come over at one point and take me out to lunch. She was 2. And the look on her little baby face when we all said hello, not quite grasping the situation but feeling some kind of way about it, I looked at her, hugged her and thought to myself, what I am doing trying to off myself when she’s around?
I don’t quite know how to end this yet- which sucks because I want to post this before today is done! Just know that we are so many things to each other and now we’re going to live almost 2,000 miles apart, something we’ve never done before- definitely a new and exciting chapter is unfolding- and we celebrate that…
So in the spirit of our spoof-y nature, allow me to post this hilarious video made a couple years ago about the Kardashians, probably the funniest one I’ve seen about them so far and to please pay attention to minute 7:42 when “Khloe” gets redundant about the love she has for her sister Kim- because anytime we hear that, we laugh… “because we’re sisters”- because we’re Siren and Serene...







 
 

Thursday, June 15, 2017

What A Joke




The first two Godfather movies came on TV about a couple weeks ago one afternoon and even though my father, sister (Christine), and I have seen them before, we always jump at the chance to tune in as if we’ve never seen them. Both Dad and Chris read Mario Puzo’s book many years ago, and I’m just beginning to, up to chapter 9. In part 2 of the film there’s a quick scene when Fredo is a baby, very sick with pneumonia, wailing. Vito (de Niro) is agonizing over this a few feet away, visibly upset, concerned, and achingly helpless, as most parents tend to feel when their baby is suffering so much.

“Dad,” Christine starts to deadpan.

“That was you in February and we were like Vito here!”
I don’t remember if I had that idea first or if she did but it really doesn’t matter. We both “got it” right away and howled with laughter for a good few seconds, so familiar with the storyline of this film that we were able to momentarily distract ourselves, so embedded in the drama of Dad and his illness, and the toll it takes on him and on us, that this absurd, crude joke was oddly welcomed.
We indeed felt like Vito that day in February when Dad was rushed to the Emergency Room, three days after his 66th birthday, definitely not laughing. Dad was in a lot of pain with his pneumonia and sky rocket high blood pressure, thinking it was a heart attack, feeling as if he wasn’t going to make it. I cried in the ambulance sitting beside him asking why in the world did he wait until I got home from work, almost 6:00pm, instead of calling me right away. He explained that his chest didn't hurt as much yet, not until I arrived- as in, a weird “perfect timing”. But sometimes my dad has this incredibly high threshold and pain tolerance combined with the desire to buck up and follow procedure. I can picture him hunched over the living room couch (where I found him that evening) advising himself to, “just wait until Tennille gets home”, regardless of how much pain he's in.
He didn’t say anything back in response to our joke, unfazed. Not offended, but not joking back either, maybe a little smirk appeared on his face and a shaking of the head, “smh”. 
Moving Onto Marilyn (for no particular reason)
Dad was watching a show about Marilyn Monroe on Reelz the other day, a scandalized, “behind the legend” kind of show. I think this one. In ‘91 or ‘92, someone gave his father a big black and white framed Marilyn poster for his birthday. That evening, my cousin Yvonne and I had the silly idea (again, I don’t know who thought of it first), to sing “happy birthday” to him with the poster between us, in the same (or exaggerated) way she sang to JFK in ‘62 and instead of saying “Mr. President” we’d breathlessly coo, “Mr. Graaand-paaa”. This got big laughs from everyone who was there. I know that sounds a little gross to be singing like that for your grandfather, but he was never one to give us creepy vibes thank God, and our dad’s family is very “Hurray for Hollywood” and always loves a good spoof/parody/joke. Nothing more came out of that.
Marilyn Monroe/Norma Jean and I share a random link -the same birth day and month. This makes me contemplate her more than I would have if we didn’t share a birthday. Christine is a big Marilyn fan and truly enjoys her work; me, not as much. I am not hating, I’ve actually been fascinated enough to sketch her face one day
 



 






Probably in ‘98. This was a photo I took of the drawing, probably in the early-mid 2000s, hence the flip phone nearby. The cheat method I used was something I found in a ‘How-to draw’ book from the library. Here are two good links describing upside down drawing.
This has you drawing using “the right side of your brain”, making the eye see more objectively. I like how it came out though the face looks faded and smudged, which kind of fits in a way - the faded, tragic kind of glamour that Marilyn embodied. I didn't seem to capture her fun, bubbly style here.






Same day. Billie's eyes are too small and far apart here in my opinion. But it looks more accurate than anything I’ve done prior, spatial wise. So I might try it this way again. Sometimes I write like this too in a way- I gather up information, life data all over the place, or ‘upside down’, not always making sense at first. I write it down trying to be objective, then later I try to make sense of it all and find some meaning.

Anyway, so far this is one of my favorite stories regarding Marilyn. I didn’t know this about her only up until about a year ago.
But since this entry began with a joke, however twisted, allow me to end with one of hers.
It's not true I had nothing on. I had the radio on.” On reports of her nude photographs for a calendar, as quoted in TIME magazine (1952)  
Pretty clever there!















 
 
 
 









 
 
 
  








 



Friday, June 9, 2017

He Left Out the Love (My City, My 'Kids' part 2)


The other day my friend Leila posted this article on Facebook which led to this interview

and it describes what I suspected and felt what was missing as well as exaggerated, in the film “Kids”. Mel Stones and High are interviewed here; two of the real ‘kids’, so, out of the mouths of babes, or kids in this case, who are technically not kids anymore. Mainly, it was the love and the looking out for each other that Larry Clark's interpretation totally misses here. The one gesture of not even all-out love, but random kindness that I remember from the film was for a few seconds when Casper handed a little girl on a stoop some candy or an apple, something like that- that was about it. And yes, Ruby’s concern for Jenny was clear. Maybe I’ll see it again because there are probably a few more examples.



But New York streets were very different pre-Giuliani and pre- 9/11 as these articles point out, and the instant communication that we have at our disposal these days makes a huge difference in ways both big and small. If these kids had Facebook, MySpace, or cell phones for example, Jenny would be able to track Telly down a lot quicker and there probably would be no movie, or at least not that plot.



I wasn't a 90’s club kid growing up. Going to ‘The Tunnel’ one night with my aunt Ydalia at 19 hardly counts, wouldn’t you agree. I didn’t smoke blunts, drink 40’s, and I never really tried my luck or honed my skills with a skateboard. A lot of kids in my school hung out and got high in Central Park’s Sheep’s Meadow or just called, “The Meadow” because LaGuardia is in the Upper West Side, though they wouldn't shy away from downtown’s Washington or Tompkins Square park at times.

NYC Church of Christ’s Manhattan sector got a hold of me in my early teens (which was also the early 90’s) and so I was more involved with their youth groups and outings at the time- which for the most part was fun and felt good, both socially and spiritually. Nevertheless, in April of ' 93 I broke away from them. I’ve been writing about that intense turning point in my life lately and I’ve brought it up in therapy over the years, so I don't feel the need to get off track and divulge here. But basically, I started cutting school more and hanging out in the city- sometimes alone, sometimes with friends, sometimes with a guy. Also from about 1990- 94 I often hung around my Titi Janis when she was putting out her off-off Broadway plays, helping her out backstage and through that, got to know Greenwich Village, the East Village, and the Lower East Side a bit more.

In late ‘94, my mom and I had a meeting with an LaG counselor who felt that the best thing for me would be to transfer to an alternative high school. Feeling determined and hopeful about this change, I got into City-as-School which happened to be in Greenwich Village. Internships from all over the city were available to us as well as classes in the building. The Film Forum movie theater is right near the school and movie nerd that I am, loved going there.

When ‘Kids’ turned 20, I wrote something about it and eventually posted it here. Even though I wasn’t part of their scene, I was still a NYC teenager from the 90’s who walked away with something the day I saw it- it still spoke to me in a big way, as these post discussions do from the actual kids themselves. I love that they've come out with this photography book, That’s A Crazy One and that the proceeds are going to go to New York City public schools’ art and photography programs. I ordered my copy last night right after reading the first article. Mel Stones says that getting into photography saved her life and so now they’re dedicating this book to their “departed” as they put it.  They point out that they continue to love and support the friends who are still around today too. Which I love.

I feel like a lot of people there now have watched too many movies about New York, have this perception of what it is to be a New Yorker, and carry around a certain attitude that doesn't correlate with what a real New Yorker was. It's not this portrayal of tough, everyone-for-themselves New Yorkers. When people are poor, they support each other. Locals, natives, they support each other.” -Mel Stones