


Tonight, a picture of my younger sister and her husband on their wedding day. There were several reports on the wedding, but I didn’t do very well with sharing pictures.
I wrote about one kind of anniversary and year-marking event the other day. Though it’s not exactly the three-month anniversary of my sister’s and brother-in-law’s marriage, it’s close enough and reminds me that Monday marks one thing and Tuesday marks another and Wednesday, etc., etc., year after year. It’s good.
Happy Three Month Anniversary, lovebirds. You guys are almost too gorgeous here. Some people will decide they do not like you for this reason.

I am sprawled on a hotel bed in Charlotte, S.C.*
Earlier today (not in my pajamas) I hosted a live-streaming event for the talented, prolific, famous, and oh-so-friendly folk artist Jim Shore. I met Jim when I filmed an episode of Love of Quilting in the spring; he was the guest and we got on like peas n’ carrots. When Shore & Co. decided to do this worldwide live-streaming event, they called me up. All of Jim’s designs come from his brain, but some are created in licensing partnership with minor companies such as Disney, Peanuts, Warner Bros., etc. What I’m getting at is that I’m now a Disney princess.
The event went beautifully. I had awesome hair thanks to Jim’s daughter Robin. I’m told the Jim Shore website was flooded with hits to the point where things weren’t working properly, probably the unofficial goal. We almost had a microphone disaster but two minutes after we were supposed to start, it was fixed and we rode the web to victory. It all seems so civilized and easy, but it only looks easy and it’s actually so civilized (not just this event but all on-camera stuff) that by the time you’re done, you feel like a Honda Civic that didn’t get its headlights turned off. Drained, in other words. Soon as my hotel room door is closed on days like this, I did what I always do when I’ve been on-camera and smiling for a full day. This is what I recommend:
Enter room. Take off shoes. Fling shoes across the floor. (Not violently; it’s kind of a free-throw thing.) Drop bag. Yawn. Scratch ribs. Flop on bed. Sigh deeply and be annoyed that didn’t laptop was not taken out of bed before the flop. Retrieve laptop. Crack open. Listlessly look at email. Do nothing for five minutes. Possibly watch YouTube video; do not view self on YouTube for any reason whatsoever (this is a general rule.) Scratch ribs again. Get up to get snack. Eat snack on bed, feeling guilty but not that guilty. Retrieve Hello Kitty headband and put on so to wash face. Eventually wash face. Brush teeth. Possibly watch 19 Kids and Counting for a little while. Turn off. Also turn off light. Sleep instantly with mouth wide open. Dream about that lady on Regis & Kathy Lee who is not Kathy Lee and does not do morning show with Regis, except he’s there and also Donald Trump is there and also there is a fox running around the studio, not on purpose.
You’re welcome.
*Post didn’t post last night for some reason. But what is time, anyway?

In a few days, it will be the sixteenth anniversary of the death of Jeremiah. Every August, as the end of the month begins to peek up over the fence, I think about my friend Jeremiah and how he died, when he died, and where he died. I never think about why he died because there is no answer to that question, just the sound of a small rock being dropped into a well. The best thing to do is to think about Jeremiah when he was alive, okay. But his untimely death is part of him; its fact throws all that he was and everything he did into relief.
It’s easy to mythologize people after they’re gone: the mean old grandpa ends up not being so much of a jerk, the neighbor wasn’t really that annoying, etc. But Jeremiah was — truly — kind of a god. He grew up in Winterset, IA, but that made no sense. This boy was a prince from a far-off land. In our circle of friends in high school, he was more than the Alpha; he was the Omega, too. This was the mid-1990s and Jeremiah looked like he was in the coolest band that didn’t exist yet on MTV’s Alternative Nation. He was wicked smart, loved to read, and it’s possible he invented the devilish grin. I was actually in 8th grade when he was a senior in my sister Hannah’s class; those two, plus James, my sister’s boyfriend, were the best of friends and that meant Jeremiah was at our house a lot with the rest of the gang. That he paid any attention to me at all blew me away. Jeremiah’s attention was sunshine.
We all ended up in Iowa City for college. Hannah, James, Jeremiah, and our friends Sarah and Ryan all lived in a house together off campus. I didn’t live in the house but I might as well have. We were thick as thieves. Jeremiah was dating achingly pretty, whip-smart Sara Beth. He was going to go to France the next year to study. There were amazing parties. There was so. Much. Laughing. And Jeremiah bought a motorcycle because that’s the sort of thing Jeremiah did.
He crashed it not more than a few blocks from the house. Sarah (housemate) was on the back of the bike and was thrown, but survived with minor injuries. Jeremiah splashed into the street. His head slammed into a parked car. While waiting for the ambulance, my sister arrived and she held him. She’s only told me about those agonizing minutes with him once. Exactly once, and now it’s been sixteen years. So.
James, Hannah, and I were at the hospital all night. Jeremiah’s mother and father made the 3-hour drive from Winterset to Iowa City in a little over an hour. Jeremiah was dying. His brain was swelling, wouldn’t stop. I saw the doctor come out and tell his mother there was nothing they could do and the sounds that came from inside that woman were indescribable. We got to go in and say goodbye. He was all wrapped up in gauze. Everything had gone inside out. All color had drained from every galaxy. Nothing could ever, ever be good again. This was not happening. Not happening.
Nothing about Jeremiah dying was good. It’s not a situation where you say, “Oh, well, you know, it was really lousy at the time, but it turned out okay because…” Nope, not this one, and I suggest you do not suggest it — not to me, not to my family, not to his. The world is missing a Christmas light. That beautiful string of Christmas lights on the tree, right there in the center of all that pine is a dark patch and you can never, ever get light there again. You can still have a good holiday. There will still be presents and good food and family. But you’ll look over — sometimes even by accident — and you’ll see that dark spot and feel sad. Because it is sad. It’s the saddest thing in the whole, whole, whole wide world.
No one has ever stopped loving that person.

A major selling point for my apartment here in the Kennedy Warren building was its proximity to the Smithsonian National Zoological Park, otherwise known as “the zoo.” The sweet leasing agent who showed me around the place said, “So the zoo’s your next door neighbor, which is coo. If the wind is right, you can hear the zebras.” She barely got the word “zebras” out before I said those three thrilling/terrifying words:
“I’ll take it.”
And the zoo really is immediately next door. There is no high-rise, no cluster of homes to the east because the zoo is there. I have been through the zoo many times and still haven’t seen all the animals; pandas are apparently agoraphobic, the reptile house is always closed, and sea lions are lazy, I guess. When I do catch an animal out at meal time (zebras eat a lot of hay) it’s thrilling; like any other sensitive person, however, it bothers me to see a wild animal behind glass. I’m still not sure how I feel about it all, especially because of what happened the other day. What happened the other day is that I heard a lion roar. And roar. And roar.
Have you ever heard a lion roar? A real-life lion less than 200 feet away? I’m sure National Geographic specials viewed in HD with movie theater-grade sound does a decent job of it, but it ain’t the same. The duration and the start of a real lion’s roar might follow the MGM lion’s script, but what a digital lion can never create is the deep, vibrate-your-chest, subwoofer bass at the bottom of the roar and it’s not coming from speakers. It’s coming from that animal, right over there. Think breath. Think chest cavity. Think communication across miles.
If someone asked you to tell them what you know about lions, without question you’d say that the lion is “the king of the jungle.” When you hear a big, big lion roar, those words will actually become true for you. The lion is the king of the jungle without question. Nothing can do what that thing does. Nothing sounds like that. There’s nothing as strong, nothing as beautiful, and nothing as terrifying, either — that sound is designed to make you run.
And now I gotta.

My father called me on my birthday. I haven’t talked to him in maybe four years.
I can’t recall how long exactly, but when you’re dealing with that unit of measure, the number doesn’t seem to matter. The phone call was odd and stilted; in under three minutes my father was able to make me sad, flabbergasted, and furious, as usual. I asked questions about his life and learned probably five things about him. He asked me zero questions about my life and learned .05 things about me. That’s pretty much been the ratio from “go.”
And I was at the hair salon! Christophe was doing my highlights! It was weird. When I covered the mouthpiece and whispered, “It’s my father! I haven’t talked to him in like four years!” Christophe’s eyes got big as saucers (in a Versace tea service, naturally) and he dropped a box of foils.
I get so unbelievably tired when I think of my father so I’m offering up an entry from the PaperGirl Archive. If, right after that call, someone had asked me how old I was on my birthday, I would’ve said, “Oh, I suppose about ninety, ninety-five.”