my last two weeks.

my life in songs that i can only wish i’d written.

this album came out a while before The Elder and Unknown was born. it was (and still is) one of my favorites at the time surrounding her birth. this song just came up in my random playlist. not an exceptionally remarkable coinkydink, given that most of my on-computer was ripped from my CD collection, but remarkably apropos to the moment, anyway.

from Peter Murphy’s “Love Hysteria”

My Last Two Weeks

When I returned
You buried my last two weeks
My last two weeks
Of my new times
So it didn’t seem like
A wasted mouthful
A wasted mouthful
Because of a trip
That was trapped inside you

I was trapped inside you
And always imagined
That I could
I always imagined
Imagined I would
Conjure you up
Conjure you up
So it didn’t seem like
It didn’t seem like

I was conditioned
I was conditioned about that
So it didn’t seem like
A wasted mouthful
Am I untruthful
Am I untruthful
As a result of being
Maybe
Maybe it was too soon

The red rose
I liken it to the flicker of the pure
Fleeting moments
Precede our actions
Light that’s not burning
Light that’s not burning
No more lost sinking feeling
Tethered to your shoe
Tethered to you

We ask the controller
He sends us flames
Our lying bodies sleep
His whispered word says
Ah this is how
This is how it looks
From where we weep
Tethered to red rose
Tethered to your shoe
To the seven of cups
Tethered to you

"about my family"

well, it happened.

the Spouse-Unit got a response from The Elder and Unknown. and The Elder and Unknown responded quite favorably to the information about her half-siblings that the Spouse-Unit provided, and to the Spouse-Unit ‘s contact in general. in fact, she says she was “amazingly happy”. from reading some of her past communications with my mom, i have a feeling she puts words together similar to the way i do. there are a lot of nuances to the word “amazingly”, and i would be surprised if the connotation of “overwhelmingly” wouldn’t be inappropriate. of course, since i throw multiple meanings into almost all of my creative stuff, i have a tendency to read more into things other people write than is actually there. so, i’ll shut up about that now.

i don’t think it’d be appropriate to reproduce The Elder and Unknown’s response here, but i will say this (and yes, i’m quite heartened by it). the Spouse-Unit ‘s email to The Elder and Unknown was titled “about your dad and half-siblings”. The Elder and Unknown’s response was “about my family”.

i don’t know what all has been going on in life for her, but when she says, “I realized that what I wanted all along, was a family,” things haven’t been going quite as well as they could have been. her response has me simultaneously elated and even more saddened than before. what have they done to her?

well, i guess we’ll see how everything goes. i leave in the morning. i have to go change my login to Blogger to something i can remember on the road, just in case i have time to update on the fly.

3 days

okay, so those of you familiar with my past blogging endeavors were probably wondering when the first hiatus would occur. so to you i say, “hah! 3 days is a heckuva lot shorter than [x] months!”

no, what happened is i picked up strep throat from some kind soul (probably my son, bless his little heart), so Sunday and Monday were not great days for me. i’m pretty much over it now, though, i’m happy to report. hurray for penicillin and its derivatives!

“the daughter” hasn’t responded to my mom’s last email. i’m a bit frustrated with my mother for this, because it tangented into all the sexual indescretions of virtually everyone in the family. she was trying to show how life can be okay despite some of those shortcomings, but i can’t help but wonder if that didn’t make The Elder and Unknown at least a little uneasy about things. in her communications with mom, church and church functions have more prevalent than mentions of family, after all.

since we are going to be in San Antonio, the Spouse-Unit sent The Elder and Unknown an email. there’s been no response to that, either. but she now knows a little bit more about all of us, and has the Spouse-Unit ‘s contact information. mine, too, since the Spouse-Unit gave her the link to our website.

but that’s where we stand for now. i leave for Saint Louis early Thursday morning, then the Spouse-Unit and I will join up in San Antonio late Sunday. it’ll be impossible not to think of The Elder and Unknown while we’re there, of course, but at this point, it’s pretty much 50-50 (or less) that we’ll get to see her. more likely is some sort of meeting with my adoptive parents, as i will be going by our old house while the Spouse-Unit is at her conference on Monday. i won’t be knocking at the door, but i am curious as to how the neighborhood has changed since i was there last in 1990 ~ which was when i dropped The Elder and Unknown and her mother off after they had come to visit me and my (real) parents up in Lubbock.

mental maundering

and then, sometimes it dawnnes on you ~


the name Dawnne came about a long time ago, back when i was at the Presidio of Monterey at the Russian Language School. i coined it as a cognitive antonym to “dawn”.

of course, a simple google will readily show that there are no unique thoughts, and that several people named Dawnne are older than i.

yeah okay, and they all seem to be female. shut up.

before The Elder and Unknown was born, her mother and i made a list of names. (The Elder and Unknown) Rochelle Dawnne, a combination of names i selected, won out. when i met my natural parents in that same year and changed my name, “Dawnne” became a literal attachment to The Elder and Unknown, who was born a month after my change of name.

when The Elder and Unknown was four, i was asked to give up my rights to her so that her step-father could adopt her and place her on his insurance. as i’ve already noted here, that seemed to be the best thing i could do for her, so i did. when he adopted her, however, “Dawnne” was dropped from her name.

but that attachment, which was always subjectively tangential in its own way, was never broken.

she hasn’t chosen to respond to mom’s last communication for several days. since she corresponds via her computer at work, that could be for any number of reasons, so we’re not reading anything into it.

irony of ironies, the Spouse-Unit has a conference in San Antonio next week. i will be going with her, as we’ve never had the chance for me to show her around my old stomping grounds. it won’t be like going home, though, considering all that happened in what seems like so long ago. i wasn’t Dawnne back then. and heck, Six Flags, Sea World, and the huge Mercado that used to be just a quiet Riverwalk weren’t even built until after i had moved away.

it’ll be another excercise in tempered impatience, i suppose. i have interesting karma. i’m still undecided as to whether or not i should be looking forward to the next lifetime….

things i say (i)

“You are second only to your future self.” {semi-original. i think it’s adopted.}

There are no divisions between things about to collide. {Ian McCullough}

Reality is the intersection of desire and recognition. {original}

“You can’t change the world
But you can change the facts
And when you change the facts
You change points of view
If you change points of view
You may change a vote
And when you change a vote
You may change the world ” {Martin L. Gore}

Those who welcome death have only tried it from the ears up. {Wilson Mizner}

thank you


a friend notes: “you are experiencing some pretty intense emotions right due to current circumstances as well as revisiting some pretty rough chapters of your past”. seeing as that’s about the fifth or sixth general comment on such today, i respond:

yeah, sure. but like it says on the right over there: “i may be honest, but don’t take me too seriously. no one else seems to!” and ironically, i’m serious about that. i long ago had to learn to deal with these issues. i promised myself two things:

1. that regardless of what came about from all this, i would be there for both of them whenever i was allowed to be, and

2. i would never deny any of it.

as far as number 2 was concerned, the depth i took that to was to require her mother and step-father to come up with rights-release paperwork that clearly stated i was foregoing my rights to her as her birth father. the standard of such legal documents is to literally deny parentage. i refused to sign my name to something that was a lie. as well, to me, a function of non-denial is disclosure.

so, these things are on my mind, is all (and if that smacks to you as denial, so be it, but it’s honestly not the case). i can’t get all fraught with all this. i have two children to raise and other responsibilities to clients and family alike. i am blessed with the ability to type in web-based blog entry forms while the computer churns on some automated photo processing batches. i’ve simply pulled back from some of the online forums and what-not, and we’re thankfully between betas on some of the software i help with.

of course these things concern me and weigh heavily on me, but truly friends, i’m neither in crisis nor is this even necessarily intense. this is hidden light, not spot light, after all!

thank you very much for your concern. the subject matter is inherently emotional, but my state of mind, in many ways, is fairly clinical.

(yeah, shut up about the double-entendre there! heh.)

little windows

understandably, she is afraid to meet me. she has been told that i am “evil and such a terrible person that [she] shouldn’t want to talk to [me]“. i’m not surprised, because i’m sure in their mindset, i was. but, i noticed long ago that my adoptive parents continually lacked the courtesy, let alone the basic human understanding, that people change, grow, and mature. and sadly, her mother apparently chose to wrap herself in a mindset that as young adults we both knew was psychologically debilitating.

i suppose that means her mother has matured in her own way. for my part, i never assumed she wouldn’t. in fact, due to the circumstances, she became a parent of teenagers long before i did, so i’ve always understood that her mother’s understanding of the world we live in and life in general would naturally be more adept than mine.

of course, as a soccer referee, i have since come to understand that many parents of teenagers are less well-equipped to guide their children than one could hope to imagine.

imagine being four and having your name changed, and never being told why.

imagine being a freshman in high school and learning you have a natural brother by finding the adoption papers in a desk drawer.

imagine being seventeen and finding a letter from your grandmother (on the wrong side of the family, of course) hidden as well. well, i suppose hidden is better than destroyed.

she was raised by her natural mother and step father. and yet she says, “But after being told all of my life that nobody wanted me, it is kind of hard to change that mind set.” i’m still trying to wrap my head around that. i was adopted, and basically told the same thing, not living with the woman who brought me into the world. and when you consider the circumstances of her birth, which some of you know, the irony meter blows out the top. i wanted her more than anything, but was literally in a circumstance that wouldn’t allow it—at least not at the level of comfort her mother required.

when she writes my mother, she almost never mentions her parents, and when she does so, it’s in the context of what they haven’t told her, or what they did. in her exchanges with my mother over the past year, she hasn’t mentioned her half-brothers (the ones she grew up with) at all. i can only assume how familial her family must be. mine was the same way, but i wasn’t even related to them. i know that through these retransmitted one-sided perspectives, it would be impossible for me to really understand what she feels, but i don’t think she feels very good about things.

when her mother and i parted ways, i thought i was doing the right thing. and actually, i know i was, but it felt wrong, and it’s impossible now not to view it as wrong. i worried deeply about how things would be for her, but also recognized that with a military contract still over me and a military specialty that the Army had invested a lot of money into, my choices for the future were not the best for her. when i was asked to give up my rights to her when she was four, the Spouse-Unit and i contemplated suing for custody. but we declined to do so, because we felt that trying to take her out of her home at such an age would have been damaging.

it turns out the right thing was the wrong one there, too.

today’s number is fifteen. it’s supposed to be celebratory. but fifteen is also six (it’s a numerological thing), which is the union of opposites. would that there were fewer opposites in my personal history.

would that i had been stronger back then. would that i be strong enough to take her fears away. but it’s not about strength, it’s about patience. that tempered impatience that only comes with knowing it’s been out of my hands for far too long to try to make up for now.

all i get are little windows into her life. i yearn for more, but i already see more than i want to as consequence for those “right things” that i’ve done.