Mother's Day 2014

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Mother's Day 2014

It’s Mother’s Day today and I am filled with so many emotions. First, gratitude for all the great mothers in my life… Hope, Mary, Wendy,Dori, Sue, Lynne, Vicki, Linda, Lois, Nona, Marlene, Sandy, Redenta, Carol, Heidi, Sheila… and on and on. They are the standard that the rest are held up to… the good ones… the ones who gave love in a way that it nurtured and produced incredible gifts with purchase… as I call the children they gave us.
I’m also filled with great sadness that Kate’s kids are missing their mother this Mother’s Day, only a few days after her passing. Life can be so cruel… but to lose a mother so close to Mother’s Day is like adding insult to injury. Now I know Kate, she would say, “Get over it, darling, life’s too short.” But it’s going to take all of us a little time to get over missing our wonderful Kate.
And I’m filled with a little happiness. The monkey on my back, the one I thought I’d never be able to get off… it’s gone. I can finally forgive and moved on. It came with a lot of work and a conversation I had with a wonderful man in Boston…who literally changed my life with a one-hour conversation. It was one of those conversations that not only opened my eyes but confirmed my thoughts. It freed me. It allowed me to love because he absolutely convinced me that I was not crazy, that it was not me, that I had been right all these years. Talk about a gift! This man gave me a mega-gift.
And this Mother’s Day comes with memories… of Mother’s Days past, of friends no longer with me, of happier times and sadder times. It comes with gratitude for the friends I have remaining and the relationships I have nurtured. It comes with honesty and with commitment and most of all it comes with love. Whoever thought I would say that on this day? Whoever thought.
Mother’s Day was never a day I looked forward to. Once in a card shop I stood in front of the Mother’s Day cards looking for over 30 minutes. Finally, a salesclerk came up to me, “Can I help you find something. What are you looking for?”, and I replied, “Happy Mother’s Day to a crappy mother.” “Oh dear, we don’t have any of those… those are the cards you wish you could send… but instead you send this one.” And she reached into the shelves of cards and without looking pulled out the first card she touched. It said, “Happy mother’s day to a wonderful Mom.” And inside something like “For all the time times you were there… for all the love you made… for all the guidance you gave… for making me a better person. This card is for you.” I read it. Looked at the lady and said, “Perfect”. She laughed out loud and put her arm through mine as she walked me to the cash register. “You’ll be a lot happier sending this one.”
Yep, I’m glad I never have to do that again. I’m glad I never have to be disappointed again on Mother’s Day. Today I can send those cards with a clear conscience and I can mean it. Surrender is not bad thing, it’s a means to an end. It’s a way to save your sanity. It’s knowing you’ve been right all these years and don’t have to feel guilty anymore. Surrender, I have learned is a good thing… a very good thing.
And so on this Mother’s Day when I’m so grateful for all the loving women who have been put in my life, I say Happy Mother’s Day to one and all. I say God, I wish Kate had been here for one more Mother’s Day, one more Christmas, one more Thanksgiving. But she’s not and we, who loved her, will move on. You see, surrender works in all areas of your life…. forgiving a mother or grieving a friend. No matter what the issue is, surrender is not defeat. I’m having t-shirts printed with that saying on it. “SURRENDER IS NOT DEFEAT”. $14.99 plus shipping and handling… free with the purchase of 10 books or more.
HAPPY MOTHER’S DAY
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Say a little prayer for Kate

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This morning I woke up, my right hand was so stiff that I couldn’t close it. The dogs were on the bed at six a.m. pushing their nose under my hand begging for attention. I was stiff as a board getting out of bed and feeling very sorry for myself but I got out of bed, fed the dogs, let them out and read my emails. The first one I saw just said, “MOM”. At first I thought it was a joke, one of those long emails that ends with a punch line. But as I read on, I realized that it was no joke and that one of my dearest friends in Europe, The Auntie Mame of my life, The female Pied Piper who brought all kinds of wonderful people together, was seriously ill in a hospital and the doctors don’t know what is wrong with her as she lapses into a coma.
I met Kate at a garage sale. It was the best garage sale I had ever been to in my life. Everything was rustic, ethnic, woody, incredible… it was such a good garage sale I went back twice because the first one hundred dollars I spent just wasn’t enough. Kate was there on the first day, and there she was on the second day. We stood by a table of hand carved Indian bowls and I snapped them up. She said, to me, “I got those is a small town just outside of Calcutta.” I looked at her with incredible curiosity. “YOU got them.” “Yes, this is MY garage sale.” “What do you do?”, I asked like a precocious child. “I’m a writer.” Is all she said and there was an instant bond. We talked for a little bit, exchanged numbers and a promise to meet at the Deli for a proper introduction. About ten days later she called. We met. And the friendship was bonded for life.
Kate had lived in Europe. She wrote travel articles for magazines…but it was her life that was more interesting than any article she could have written. She had three adult children, each more gorgeous than the next. I would kid her and tell her she got her family from central casting. They had lived in Europe and her children all spoke several languages…fluently. Her son was an Adonis, her two daughters could have walked down the runway of any fashion show in Milan or Paris. Her husband looked like a leading man from a forty’s MGM musical. They just were the most stunning family I had ever seen.
As I got to know Kate she would introduce me to the most wonderful group of people I had ever wanted to know, writers, fashion designers, French surgeons, French literary agents… it was the Algonquin all over again. And Kate was the Belle of the ball. She would hold these massive dinner parties where 16 to 20 people would sit around a football long table and drink and eat and laugh for hours.
It was Kate who introduced me to Blossom Folb, the incredible 92 year old artist. It was Kate who introduced me to Sam and Julie Bobrick… to Anne LeClarc… and on and on. It was Kate who called me to help her organize Blossom’s paintings and to help her organize a showing of Blossom’s work at The Pasadena Playhouse, a show where Blossom sold more painting in that week than she had in 20 years.
Kate was an huge part of my life. And so when she announced that she was moving back to Europe…that she couldn’t take the hum-drum of the United States I knew she meant it and that my life would be a little duller from now on. Duller? Why? It was Kate who cooked a dinner at my house where Marcia Wallace brought Brett Sommers and we all talked and laughed until way into the morning. It was Kate who brought me out of my deep depression and into the light, who made me feel alive again… who made me feel vital and was so happy when my play was optioned. It was Kate who would sit and talk with me until the wee hours of the morning. And now, I would have to move on without her cheering me and being my best bud. And it was Steve who sat there staring at the computer screen reading an email from her daughter… “She’s in an induced coma, her vital organs are failing, she’s on a dialysis machine because her kidneys are blocked. “
At first I thought it was a joke but then as I read on I realized it was not. Kate was in a hospital in Italy and was fighting for her life. And for the first time in a long time I knew what helpless was.
This getting older is not for sissies. We have to buck up to some really horrible things… illness, death, struggle and the loss of friends and family. Kate is not gone… Kate will never be gone… she can’t be gone… she can’t have come into my life and be gone… I just won’t allow it. And so I say a little prayer for my dear, dear friend and hope that God hears it and gives her a little extra time.
Jesus Christ I’m sick of writing this kind of blog…why can’t everyone be well and just live forever?
P.S.
Here’s an entry I never wanted to make. We lost Kate two hours ago. That wonderfully mad woman who taught me about life and food and living and fun and travel is gone. There will be a place in my heart that will never be filled. My wonderful Kate is gone.

IT WORKS IF YOU WORK IT

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Yesterday came and went without much fanfare. I looked on the calendar and it said, “your AA birthday… 1982”. I smiled and posted on Facebook that 32 years ago my life changed for the better and I thanked Bill… and then a couple of hundred people stopped on my page to wish me well. A couple of hundred!
I wish I could explain to you what my life was like 32 years ago. If I said it was a complete shambles, I would not be lying. I had lost my child… my marriage was over… my self esteem was over… my career was so badly damaged that it would take me over a decade to regain the respect of those who would work with me. It was a horrible, horrible time in my life. But then my Eskimo came and said to me, “You’re an alcoholic and you need AA.” Why had he said that? You see I had fallen in an aerobics class…one I had gone to stoned… and I had broken my ankle. My leg was in a cast up to my knee and I was chain-smoking pot. I called my Eskimo and told him I couldn’t stand the cast on my leg anymore and I was taking it off with a pair of toe nail clippers. All he said, is, “Wait, I’ll be right there.” And he came over and we talked and the next day I sat in the very last row of the Radford meeting house, by the door, listening to everyone tell their story.
The first person I saw that day was a friend from the Comedy Store. She was there… and it made sense… she was a huge drunk. I was glad to see her…and she welcomed me with open arms…”Steve, there’s a seat for you here… sit down, listen and enjoy.” I did listen and the one thing I noticed was how happy everyone was. I was not happy. As a matter of fact, I had never been so miserable in my life. But there was something in that room that called to me and so the very next day I went back to that meeting… and I went back every single day since then for 32 years. Now when I say I went back every single day, it does not mean I was at a meeting every single day, it means that I kept the principals in my heart and where ever I went, I carried a meeting with me.
So how has it changed? I’m not miserable anymore, not to the extent I was 32 years ago. I still have my days… but I know today that my worst day today is nothing like the worst days I had 32 years and two days ago. My head is clear. I’m allowed me to do things I never felt “enough” to do… like write. So far I have written seven plays, two films, two books and a blog. The joy I get from writing has far surpasses the joy I got from standing on stage telling jokes. To tell you the truth, there was no joy there… there was only fear. I remember doing a TV show and my heart was pounding so hard that I began to have pain in my shoulder, like a heart attack. It was a horrible experience. I never forgot it.
But with writing, I can sit in my office, alone, quiet, and spill my heart out and then read the comments on Facebook. Facebook, where my second career has taken hold, where over 3000 people have friended me, where I seem to have an endless stream of comments on ever subject and know not where they come from.
The gifts I have been handed these last 32 years are huge. I was someone who was so miserable some days I could not get out of bed. That doesn’t happen anymore. People have been placed into my life, like Judy Robertson, of Coogee Beach, Australia, who have picked me up, held me close, given me love and then passed on to show me that I could stand on my own two feet without them. I met Judy in Sydney, Australia at a meeting. She came along just when my sobriety needed a boost. And we had many wonderful years together… she gave me the strength to carry on without her. I know that if she was here today, it would be Judy who would be shouting from the housetops… “MY MATE STEVE HAS 32 YEARS!!!” She loved me, like no one ever loved me. She loved me the way I always wanted to be loved. And I loved her for loving me like that.
And so this last paragraph is for the person out there who has no hope, who can’t stop drinking or using drugs, whose life has fallen apart and they can understand why. I am here to tell you it works if you work it, there is a solution if you live your life one day at a time and just keep coming back. I came back… I came back from despair, from ruin and from self-hatred. I still hate myself but at least today I can do it with a clear head. It’s a good thing… a very good thing.
Love you, Judy, always.

THE NIGHT THE LIGHTS WENT OUT IN BEL AIR…

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It was a perfectly normal day in Bel Air. The sun was shining, the maids were walking up the canyon to their jobs, the Keurig was making coffee… and then it happened. The most horrible thing that could ever happen to anyone ever… in Bel Air…besides having your Mercedes keyed….. the lights went out. We had our own personal blackout. Oh LORD NO….
There I was standing at the sink getting ready to go out to an appointment when all of a sudden the lights flickered and died. The telltale hum of little motors all over my house came to a ghostly silence. I ran to my phone. Nothing. Deader than Anson Williams’ acting career. I went to my cell phone… there were the words that strikes fear into every techie’s heart… NO SERVICE. I was trapped in my own personal hell…. A home with no wi fi.
At first you are in denial. “It’ll come back… they always flicker but they come back.” Then ten minutes later when the lights have not come back on you are like 3rd class steerage on the Titanic… you’re running up stairs and looking out windows hoping that they are lowering the lifeboats, that EVERYONE has no lights or phones…that it’s just not you.
Wait! There’s movement in the street… a neighbor, in his pajamas, shaking his fist at the telephone pole. Look, we all vent in our own way.
I know. I’ll play scrabble on my iPad. Two games I got through when the flashing light said, BATTERY LOW. I can’t win… I might as well be Stevie Wonder on Dancing With The Stars.
I look out my window again and the neighbors are gathering to ask the same question, “Do you have electricity?” Just once I wanted to say, “Yes, I guess it’s only YOU.” The traffic lights are out at the end of the street and now I know why we have traffic lights. Because people are morons and think two cars can enter an intersection and turn at the same time. I can’t even begin to tell you how many times I heard screeching brakes.
There’s a little country store down the street from my house. I go down there…the owner is sitting on the steps almost in tears… ten walk-in freezers or ice cream and beer defrosting before her eyes. I have a tray of ice cubes and I’m upset… this woman has enough food for an army and should be taking her life at any moment.
Wait a minute… there’s the DWP truck. The neighbors march up there like the truck is driven by Frankenstein and we’re the villagers. “WHAT GOING ON… WHEN WILL WE HAVE LIGHTS… DO YOU HAVE COFFEE IN THE TRUCKS.” It’s then we learn that tree trimmers had cut through the line and it should be about three hours before we have electricity again. I pass out cyanide pills as people tear their clothing off and weep openly.
But then… the DWP guy says… unless you are east of this house. Those lights will be on in 20 minutes. My house is east of this house. Moment of silence. I slowly slip away from my neighbors because I know if they find out that I have electricity they will turn on my like a pack of anorexic zombies.
Twenty minutes later the lights went on and I fled the house like the Republicans fled from George Bush after the election.
And so, as I write this, everything is back to normal in Bel Air… the latte machines are working… the maids are vacuuming, the instant hot water is perking… the world is as it should be.

THOSE FLIPPEN HOLIDAYS

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Easter is over and it’s time to move on to the next holiday… Mother’s Day. What is it with Americans and their holidays? Do you realize we have a holiday for every single month of the year with the exception of one… are we that miserable that we need a holiday to give us something to look forward to? Look at this:
JANUARY: New Year’s Eve. This is a holiday where you pay 200 dollars for the same meal you had a week prior, in the same restaurant, only this week they provided you with 29 cent glitter covered hats. Then you sit around waiting for midnight like it’s high school and your waiting the bell to ring on the last period. Then you kiss the nearest person to you, find a designated driver and go home through a sobriety checkpoint… lots’ of fun.
DECEMBER: Christmas. The big Kahuna of Holidays… you spend more on giftwrap and cards than you spent on your college education. Then you eat shit you wouldn’t eat in August if they put a gun to your head… you have to fight for a parking space at the mall and max out your credit cards so that people you don’t give a shit about get a gift. Nirvana.
FEBRUARY: Valentine’s Day AND President’s Day. February is a doubleheader month. Two holidays. They do this just in case there is any money left over from December that we have not spent.
MARCH: St. Patrick’s Day. A day when Irish people go into a bar and celebrate that they are Irish. How do they do this, by getting completely wasted, hiring a designated driver and going through a sobriety checkpoint. (Who sees a pattern forming here.)
APRIL: Easter. The day Christ came back… what did he come back for? I think it’s to hire a designated driver and go through a sobriety checkpoint.
MAY: Mother’s Day. A day to worship your mother… because the monthly check you send her isn’t enough.
JUNE: Father’s Day. A day to worship your father… because the monthly check you send your mother isn’t enough.
JULY: 4TH of July. Independence day. Barbeques, parades, fireworks, alcohol… designated drivers and sobriety checkpoints. This shit has got to stop.
AUGUST: The only month to get fucked out of a holiday. All it has is NATIONAL WATERMELON DAY…. Something to offend every African American.
SEPTEMEBER: Labor Day. A day to celebrate our work… work we have to do in order to pay off New Years Eve, Christmas, Valentine’s Day, St. Patrick’s Day and 4th of July. Anyone see the irony here?
OCTOBER: Halloween. A day when gay people can finally dress up in drag and go to Ralphs.
NOVEMBER: Thanksgiving… this is the day we give thanks for finally paying off last Christmas’s bills.
And then the cycle starts all over again. Just when we see a light at the end of the tunnel, Hallmark looms it’s ugly head.
I hate the holidays…every single one of them. They force us to do things we wouldn’t naturally do… it’s like making someone pay child support for someone else’s child. Ooops. Been there…done that.
So here’s what I propose… a new holiday… On August 16th… one super holiday, one day to cover them all… we’ll call it… New St Christine Labor Day for Mom and Dad. Get all those fuckers done in one day, hire one designated drive and go through one sobriety point… AND THEN GO ON WITH OUR FUCKING LIVES.
Who’s with me?