Love Was Out To Get Meby David Greenberger The Duplex PlanetSome things you can come right out and ask,
and you'll usually get an answer. Like what time it is, or directions,
or anything comprised primarily of facts. Other more elusive
matters, besides having more than one answer, don't necessarily
come with a concise question. And what is the question if not
a key to a door of a room with something in it you want or need? In 1979 I began a process
of getting to know people much older than myself. I was working
as an activities director at a nursing home in Boston, a career
path I departed from a few years later. I did, however, hold
onto my quest to get to know these peopleskin and bones
like me, but living out their latter and final phases. Getting to know them, becoming
friends by my regular contact and frequent conversations, I'd
ask them many things. Often I'd ask surprise or odd questions,
for the more direct and expected route often yielded little in
showing me who they were right now. This was no more apparent
than in the area of love and romance. When I would ask, for example,
how they met their spouse, the story was so often told that it
had become a rote monologue, with little revealed of their current
emotional stake in the facts. I asked, "Did you ever
have a perfect kiss?" Jack Mudurian said, "If a pretty
girl let me kiss her, I'd take her for a ride in the car, if
I had a car to drive." Jeanne Malone said, "I think
the nicest kiss I got was from Muhammed Ali." I asked, "Why do people
kiss?" Bob Shirey said "Well, for one reason, it's
so easyit's a very easy thing to do. And it's a positive
gesture, it's not negative. Why do people give people the finger?
Because it's easy and it communicates. But it's the other way
around, it means the opposite. And it doesn't cost anything.
It's cheaper than flowers, isn't it? Yeah, it is." Needless to say, I wasn't
trying to get answers to live my life by. I was trying to get
to know these old people. They held no secrets to the universe,
they had just lived more years than me. Most of the unanswerable
questions remain unansweredor the questions lose their
meaning and we turn our back on them. The cloudy stuff of life,
those things we can never really see through or aroundlike
love and deathcan never be reduced to snappy, easy-to-remember
tips (and beware of anyone who thinks they can). No, we learn
most of our important lessons from the examples of others; from
watching and from knowing other people. And whether they succeed
or fail, we learn from them, just as others are learning from
us. I was getting answers to my
questions, but those answers more importantly were adding up
into the living, breathing people I was coming to know. There
are no secrets to a life lived long, nor secrets to romance.
There are just people who've struggled with all of those issues
before us, and there's strength to be found in knowing that they
did. I asked, "What makes
a good relationship?" Ernie Brookings said, "Happiness
and coordination." Abe Surgecoff said, "Doin' for 'em,
and help each other out. And, ah, divide the money. And, ah,
lendin' clothes." Abe was a very content man,
who liked mostly to help out at the nursing homepassing
out coffee, running errands for other residents, that sort of
thing. He also came through with more of an answer than I could've
dreamed of, when I asked him if he knew the lyrics to a nonexistent
song called "Love Was Out To Get Me." Barely even pausing
to stop and think he rattled off fifteen remarkable lines. She was afraid of him Down sweetheart Every time you come to see me, I hate to see ya I want to get you down sweetheart You were once before in love with somebody, but I don't know
who the somebody is You don't put the work in You hate my love and I hate your love When I need you, you come to me with forward arms I give you things and you throw them away You throw things away and we hate each other's parting You start these different things and hope for the best You show me a door and then you didn't show me a door We hate to see each other parting I hate to see you part with no cash When I asked to give you cash, you refused. I don't know if he knew what
an amazing poem he seemed to invent out of the air, but I thanked
him, he smiled and walked away. I had no idea what I'd get from
asking for that, I was simply being a wise guy and it was a spur
of the moment bit of fun. I certainly didn't need an answer to
the question, I just needed to know somebody like Abe. return
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