Monday, August 29, 2022

the bucket list.

Lately, I've been thinking about bucket lists.

Not because I'm concerned about dying. 

Because of my dad.

(He's not dying either.)

My siblings and I were chatting via text one day this spring, and my sister said something about how the three siblings should go skydiving together. Mitch and Darrah had done it, but I had been wanting to do it for ages. Our dad also has wanted to do it for ages, so the lightbulb collectively came on. Father's Day was coming, so the three of us bought him a gift certificate to go skydiving in Luverne. Of course, I wanted to go as well. The four of us ended up doing it just yesterday, and it was easily the most insane thing I've ever done. I loved it.

The week before, Mom, Dad, and I did a "scuba 101" type class. That had also been on Dad's list of things to try, and he and I both loved it. We're planning to work towards getting our scuba certifications.

So that's why I have been thinking about bucket lists. I knew I had one, but I'd never written it down. As your classic type A, few things please me more than making lists and checking things off.

Most bucket lists can be divided into experiences, skills, and accomplishments. Mine is no exception. My bucket list is probably typical of most others, but here it is.

EXPERIENCES

  • visit all 50 states (30 down)
  • visit as many countries as possible (only seven down)
  • visit all the National Parks (11 down)
  • visit every Minnesota State Park (23 down)
  • go parasailing
  • swim with dolphins and/or sharks
  • see the Northern Lights
  • try as much weird food as I can
  • read as many books as I can

SKILLS

  • learn Tae Kwon Do
  • learn to draw/paint
  • become scuba certified
  • learn to waltz
  • learn to speak Spanish
  • learn sign language
  • learn to surf
  • learn yoga
  • learn ukulele

ACCOMPLISHMENTS

  • earn my PhD
  • publish a book
  • do a TED Talk
  • become a park ranger (when I retire)
  • become a clinic escort for abortion providers 
  • become a Master Naturalist

There are a good amount of things I have done that have been on a bucket list and are now checked off. There are also things I have done in the moment that were not on a bucket list, but in retrospect, they would have fit right in.

EXPERIENCES

  • ate fermented shark
  • rode in a hot air balloon
  • tried scuba
  • went snorkeling
  • went skydiving
  • swam in all five Great Lakes
  • hiked a few mountains
  • helicopter ride in Sedona
  • ziplined alongside Niagara Falls

SKILLS

  • can drive a stick shift
  • can swing dance
  • can plan a killer off-the-beaten path vacation
  • can play mediocre clarinet and alto/tenor saxophone

ACCOMPLISHMENTS

  • kayaked from the US to Canada
  • contributed articles to a sculpture catalog (so sort of a published author)
  • published photographer
  • own two arts-based small businesses
  • earned my Masters Degree
  • found my dream job
  • have an amazing crew of family and friends
You know how everyone knows somebody (or several somebodys) they dread seeing? Like "oh that person's coming; I better pretend to be busy"? 

Another bucket list item is to NOT be that person. 

The number one most important thing on my bucket list, though, is to live a good life. My great hope is to be a good person and leave my corner of the world a little better than I found it. I want to make the most of my time with family and friends. 

So far, I think I'm doing ok.

Monday, August 22, 2022

my portrait.

Here's one of my favorite conversation starters: I own an oil portrait of me painted by my ex-boyfriend... given to me nearly a year after we broke up.

Allow me to explain.

When I began college, I was an 18-year-old who had never had a boyfriend. I'd kissed a couple of duds, but that was it for my romantic life. You know how John Cusak in High Fidelity was concerned about dying alone at age 27, and he knew 27 was too young for that? At 17, I was already convinced I'd die alone.

Then college came along.

I was not at all used to boys liking me, but they did. It was weird and awesome. I had kind of an ugly ducking thing going on up until the very beginning of my senior year of high school when I started to take more an interest in how I looked. Apparently I looked like someone the college boys might like.

Me about a month before college. This was during
the “very serious artsy photograph” time of my life.

Here's what I didn't yet know: you don't want ALL boys to like you. Some boys are bad for you.

Enter: the Tormented Artist.

It was April 2006, and I got a message on Facebook (back when it was just for college students) from him. I had never met him, but I'd seen him around campus. It said something to the effect of "you seem cool; can we hang out sometime?" 

After nearly nine months of college douche dudes, I still hadn't learned my lesson. I said sure, and we met up. I really liked him at first. He had great taste in movies, and he opened the door to all sorts of fantastic music. He was also a talented artist, which I found impressive and fascinating. We started officially dating that June - my very first boyfriend. (I was also his first girlfriend.)

The summer was great, as we were dating long distance. Once school began, things went south pretty fast. He had severe untreated depression, which I (a naive 19-year-old) was not equipped to deal with. He also spent a week in a hospital and about a month out of school late September/early October. When he returned, he expected me to spend every spare moment with him. For a while, I did. He skipped his classes and urged me to do the same. (I didn’t, but my grades suffered from the stress.) I missed out on weeks of gorgeous fall weather, shuttered in his room and barely seeing the light of day.

Halloween finally broke me out of my prison. Halloween is my favorite holiday, and I spent the days around Halloween with friends. The Tormented Artist was incensed, accusing me of not caring about him and his well being. That line had worked before, but not for Halloween.

Things continued to deteriorate between us as the school year wore on. He made me cry on my 20th birthday. He said things I would later recognize as emotionally abusive. He manipulated and demeaned - one such occasion culminated in a fight on live radio. (We DJd a show together on the college radio station. It was awful. Our only listeners were my parents, who really enjoyed hearing this spat on air.)

My parents thought I should break up with him. My friends thought I should break up with him. It took me until July - just over a year of dating - to actually break up with him. A year of isolation and cruel comments had beat me down.

But then: I was free.

The next two years of college were some of the best years of my life. I started a double major in English and my newly discovered love, art history. I killed it in both disciplines. I went on a jazz band trip to New Orleans. I made friends that I still have today. I started dating the man I would marry.

Life was good.

In April of my junior year, the Tormented Artist was a senior. I managed to avoid him for most of that year, besides some notes exchanged in school PO boxes asking for my books and DVDs back. (I never got them back.) 

But one day, I got a note in the box saying I had a package. I wasn’t expecting anything, so I didn’t have a clue what I was in for.

I turned in my slip at the post office window and waited. The lady behind the counter reappeared with a funny look on her face… and a giant canvas. 

The color drained from my face.  

It was a portrait of me.

By the Tormented Artist.

The portrait made me look dead. My skin was a sallow whitish green, and the background was bleak. It lined up exactly with the Tormented Artist’s style: muddy and devoid of joy.

Here it is again for good measure.

The worst part?

The school day wasn’t over, so I had to haul that painting along with me to my last class.

And I had ridden my bike that day.

I had to ask my current boyfriend (who had driven to campus) to transport the big-ass painting from my ex-boyfriend.

James - the boyfriend - laughed until he cried.

That portrait is hanging in my parents’ house and has been since 2008. (It’s on the upper level where no one really goes except overnight guests. It’s too creepy to hang on the main level for the general public.) No one has the heart to throw it away, but no one really wants to look at it either. 

In every bad situation, one is supposed to be able to find the silver lining. One silver lining of this relationship manifested in a spooky portrait that in turn is a great story.

My relationship with the Tormented Artist lasted just over a year, but the Dead Calla portrait will last forever.