the writing and photography of Neil Kramer

Category: Life with My Parents (Page 10 of 11)

Heaven or Hell

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(artwork by Rob Stinogle)

I’m sitting in my local coffee shop and I see that they have some Halloween decorations up already, including a paper cut-out ghost.   

It makes me think of my father, who passed away a few weeks ago.

Not in a scary or eerie way.  If he were to become a ghost, he wouldn’t be a scary one.  He might be a nagging ghost, but not a scary one.   

Whatever.

The paper ghost makes me think about the spirit world and whether it really exists.

I should start out by saying that I don’t really believe in ghosts or spirits or even souls.  I have a pretty scientific outlook on life.  It’s very nice when people say to me that "your father is looking down on you."  I smile and appreciate their kind words.  But I don’t buy it.  To me, believing that is akin to teaching Creationism in school.

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One thing I realize is that most of my images of heaven and hell are colored by Christian thought.  You know, Angels with Wings vs. Dante’s Inferno.  

I think Judaism cleverly plays it dumb by not offering a very clear picture of the afterlife.   Maybe that’s why it’s traditional to rush the body into burial:  so nobody asks the rabbi any tough questions.  
 
Are there any knowledgeable Jews out there who can paint a clear picture of the Jewish afterlife?  What is a Jewish heaven?  Is there a Jewish hell?  Or is the Jewish hell being stuck in heaven for eternity with all of your relatives?

The traditional heaven/hell split is completely unappealing to me.  In Hell, there is suffering and pain — so there must be some sort of sensory feeling.  So, why not some sensory feeling in heaven?   Angels just seem to fly back and forth like Jet Blue flights between JFK and Long Beach.  Without the body, there’s no food, dancing, or sex — all the good stuff.

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Who the hell wants to go to heaven?  It sounds more dull than a vacation in Albuquerque.

Sure, your soul is still there.  You can think and ponder great thoughts.   Oh great, it sounds just like being in fucking grad school again.  Who wants that?  And do you at least  get weekends off to go to some keg parties in Hell?  That’s probably where all the hot girls end up anyway.

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OK, back to my father.  I guess I’m just like other Jews throughout history — avoiding the afterlife issue by talking about all sorts of other things.  How do you think Jews became such good lawyers?

Hi, Dad.  (that is, if they let you read blogs up there.  But wait a minute, you don’t know how to use a computer.  Mom always printed it out for you at work.   And I’m assuming they all have Macs in heaven, right?)  

C’mon, God.  Loosen up a bit.  Don’t make heaven such a drag.  Give the deceased some fun.  I know I’m going to be depressed when I go  — no more pizza, naked women, or reruns of "The Jeffersons." 

And those heavenly robes — I do not look good in white.

Welcome to the Hotel California

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"You mean now you actually have to BUY one of those awful sandwiches on an American Airlines flight?"  I asked Ashley, the flight attendant from Dallas, Texas.

She laughed.  Maybe it was the way I asked the question, but she laughed a lot.  She seemed to like me.  I could see her nipples getting hard under her uniform.

Before I knew it, I was in the back of the plane learning what the "mile-high club" was all about. Her uniform flew open as she rode me to her orgasm.  With the flight from Albuquerque to Los Angeles completely full, this seemed like a dangerous thing to do.  But since I’ve always been afraid of flying, I still wore my seatbelt.  As Ashley the flight attendant moaned and came, I thought I heard her say, "Thank you for flying American Airlines."

That’s when i woke up, a legal pad in my hand.  I was going to write a post for this blog, but I must have fallen asleep on the plane. 

I was on the flight with Sophia, her eyes bloodshot, her nose dripping all over the place from her cold.   A baby was crying behind us.  The businessman in front of me leaned his chair back, giving me officially two inches of leg room.  After three weeks away, first at my father’s funeral, then in Albuquerque, it was time to come home.

Life Goes On.

Now that my father has been gone for a few weeks, the "missing" him part is settling in.  It’s weird that he’s just "gone."  I can’t just call him up whenever I want, knowing he’ll be there.  He always ended his conversations by saying, "Be of good cheer," which I always found very weird.  Did he learn that in a British movie from the 1940’s?  But I’ll miss him saying it.

When you’re younger, you think the world revolves around you.  Part of getting older is realizing that it doesn’t.  Even when you go to the better world (whatever that is) —

Life Goes On.

I was out of Los Angeles for three weeks.  Did life just stop there while I was gone?

"Of course not," said the voice on the American Airlines overhead speaker.  "This is Roger Andrews, your pilot.   As we approach LAX, Neil, I’d like to thank you for flying American Airlines, especially since we were too cheap to give you a bereavement fare and you had to use your frequent flier miles.  But then again, it’s fitting that you flew with us, since your father always went with American  American for some unknown reason.  Maybe he thought it was patriotic.   "Always fly with American," he used to say. 

"Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know that," I said.   "So, what happened in Los Angeles while I was gone."

"Neil, this is Roger Andrews, your pilot.  Life went on, as it always does: 

74,300 Iced Blended Non-Fat Mochas were sold at the Coffee Bean.

6,105 women had their boobs made from a B cup to a D cup.

1,520 really bad screenplays were registered with the Writers Guild of America.

7 freeway chases occurred on the 101, four of them covered live on Eyewitness News.

575 new members were inducted at the Hollywood Scientology Center.

4 ICM assistants were promoted to talent agents after giving oral sex to their bosses.

758 Los Angeles residents moved to Oregon.

3, 878 illegal Mexican residents moved to Los Angeles."

Life Goes On.

Happy Birthday, Mom!

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The Native American tribes of New Mexico have an ancient saying:

"There are many great Jewish mothers, but some are better than others."

You’re the best!

Happy Birthday from Neil and Sophia !

Survivor: Santa Fe

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(all photos taken by Sophia with her Nokia cameraphone)

Proposal:  a new fish-out-of-water reality TV show.   

Meet Neil and Sophia.  During Rosh Hashana, have these two Jews visit the unfamiliar state of New Mexico.   Have them find the town of Santa Fe nice, but a little touristy.  Have them decide to drive up into the mountains to see the aspen trees changing color for fall.  

But here’s the twist:  These two urbanites are completely inept with the ways of nature.  Neil finds it hard to breathe at high altitudes.  Sophia is terrified when they decide to take a ski lift to the top of a ski slope in order to get a better view of the panorama. 

Here’s the real topper:  While Sophia was brave to go up, she refuses to take the ski lift back down.   The ride made her feel sick to her stomach.

"I’m not going on that thing again."

"What do you suggest — they helicopter us out?"

"We can walk down."

"Walk down?  I can hardly breathe.  And it’ll take us forever!"

"I don’t care.  You take the ski lift.  I’m gonna walk." 

Neil seriously thinks about her offer, then remembers that he is a blogger.  If he wrote that he let a woman walk down a mountain down by herself, what kind of asshole would he look like?  (note:  he never lies in his blog)   What if one day in the future he wanted to sleep with one of his female readers?  It would be a cold night in hell that it would ever happen if he looked like such a wimp.

Neil takes a deep breath and off they go, down the slope.

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New twist:  In fifteen minutes, they come to a fork on the trail.  Like the idiots who stay at the haunted house in a a cheapo horror movie, they decide to take this mysterious road, thinking it will be "faster."  Soon, they are lost. 

Now, I know you seasoned campers and adventurers out there are laughing at us, thinking it impossible that two people can get lost five minutes away from a popular ski resort, but that’s what makes this show so special.  It’s "Survivor" meets "Lost" meets "Dumb and Dumber."

Neil and Sophia hear a rustling in the woods.

"What is that?" asks Neil.

Sophia turns back. She starts walking faster.

"It looks like a giant dog.  Don’t look!"

"Do you mean a WOLF?"

"No, just a giant dog."

"What do you mean… a giant dog?  What is a giant dog?"

"A giant dog.  Maybe it has rabies.  Let’s walk fast.  Don’t look at it."

"Why not?"

"I read once that if you see a bear, don’t look at it or if will think it is a challenge."

"I always thought that if you see a bear, you make a lot of noise to scare it away."

"What’s the difference.  It’s a fucking giant dog, not a bear!"

"What are you yelling at me for?  You’re the one who brought up the bear!"

A black Labrador pushes through some shrubbery and walks past us.  He wears a collar and an ID.  Maybe he is the dog of the park ranger.  Whatever he is, he isn’t that big, and he has no interest in us at all.  He wanders past us.  Sophia sighs, relieved.

"I have to pee."

"Do it in the woods."

"How?"

"Crouch down and pee.  C’mon, let’s pee together.  I have to go too."

Neil and Sophia hide behind a tree and they both pee against it.   Sophia smiles, enjoying the air.

"Now I know why people become nudists.  The mountain air really feels good against your skin."

Recently, Neil’s father passed away.  His uncle told them a story about some doctor friend in the 1950’s who invited them both to a "nudist camp" in Cape May, N.J.  Neil’s uncle said that Neil’s father just stripped down to everything but his Woody Allen glasses and wasn’t ashamed at all.

Neil and Sophia quickly take off their clothes and flash the state of New Mexico.

After the peeing and the flashing, this couple is ready for any adventure.  They are now seasoned nature lovers.  They continue down the mountain, a new found fire in their eyes. 

Sophia knows that Neil feels a little guilty for travelling during Rosh Hashana.  When they reach some sort of abandoned bridge/covering, she has an idea.  They say some traditional prayer and then they walk over the bridge as a symbol of walking from one year to the next.

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Neil and Sophia make it back to their Budget Rental Car within two hours.  But in this proposed TV series, they will remain lost for at least 13 episodes.

Man in the Mirror

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Every Friday night, a group of Jewish men meet in the apartment building I grew up in and greet the Sabbath.  Most of the men are older or find it difficult to travel to a temple.  Traditionally, you need ten men to form a “minyan,” the group that prays together.  In Judaism, praying in a group during Shabbat is considered more important than praying alone (sorry ladies, traditional Judaism doesn’t count women as part of the minyan). 

I’m not very religious and don’t go to temple very often, but I was honored to be asked to join the minyan for the night.  The leader of the group said it would be a good opportunity for me to say “Kaddish,” the traditional prayer said for the deceased.   I can read Hebrew and know the prayer, but I’ve never stood in front of a group of religious men and said Kaddish out loud in honor of my father.  It was an experience as powerful as my bar mitzvah.   The ancient text praising G-d really leapt off the page for me.  During the service, Kaddish is said three times.  During the first time, my voice was uncertain and croaky, so the leader said the prayer along with me.  But by the last reading, I found my confidence and read it in a strong voice.

When I returned to my apartment, I felt nervous energy coming from my mother and Sophia.  My mother was going through a pile of my father’s paperwork.    He was a real “paper saver” who kept bills and receipts from decades ago.   I showed my mother how to use the shredder I bought my father last year, something he never even plugged in.

Sophia was involved in another matter – our trip home.  When we learned that those so-called “bereavement fares” were a joke (and cost more than the regular fares), we used our American Airlines frequent flier miles to come to New York.    Earlier that day, we learned that if we wanted to, we could make a multi-day stopover anywhere in the continental U.S. on the way back.   Sophia said we could use a few days of rest after the last few weeks of stress and sorrow.  We asked my mother to come along wherever we went, but she wanted to go back to work.   I went through my list of bloggers, thinking whom to visit, but we decided on Albuquerque because I saw that they are having a world-famous International Balloon Festival next week.   We booked the flight, but then we realized the most of the hotels were already filled.  So, when I came back from services, Sophia was all frustrated from trying to find a hotel.   She asked for my help, but I told her I was exhausted.   The week’s tensions were finally hitting me.  Until now, we had all been too busy to feel tired.   From the minute we arrived in New York, it’s been visits to the hospital, arranging for the funeral, and sitting shiva.  I felt my body collapsing and went to my parents’ room and quickly fell asleep.

The next morning, I woke up in the same bed.  Sophia was sleeping next to me.  My mother was asleep in the living room.   It was pretty early in the morning, but the New York City Sanitation trucks were already rolling outside.   I had a morning hard-on.   I moved against Sophia and she told me to get lost.  “We’re separated, remember?”  Besides, she was up half the night looking for hotels in Albuquerque and was upset that I woke her up.   I went to take a shower.

I turned on the water and stepped inside the shower stall.  It was nice to feel the water against my back.  I’d been so tense.  Still hard, I started playing with myself.   I looked down at my penis and laughed — I remembered being in the exact same spot doing the exact same thing when I was fifteen years old.   Maybe I was just too tired from the last two weeks, but for some reason, after a few minutes, I lost interest in what I was doing.  That would never have happened to me when I was fifteen.

I stepped out of the shower and dried myself off.    Through the closed door, I could hear that my mother was now up.    I could hear the grinding of the shredder ripping up my father’s receipts from 1995.  I could hear that Sophia was now awake also.  I could hear her watching the “Alias” episode that she had taped on my my mother’s ancient VCR.   Well, for a minute, at least.  Then I could hear her telling my mother off for switching channels and taping a Food Channel show and the cable menu instead.

With my cock still up, I couldn’t leave the bathroom… just yet.  I wiped the “fog” from the bathroom mirror and looked at myself standing there.    While we were sitting shiva, we had covered all the mirrors — as is traditional.  Now that the mourning period was over, was my father looking down at me now from heaven?   Do I even believe in that stuff?  And if he is, couldn’t the same be said for my Grandma and my late Aunt Ruthie?  Jeez, are all of my deceased relatives seeing me now with an erection?  How embarrassing. 

But It didn’t seem weird at all to think of my father as I looked at my penis.  After all, the male circumcision is what bonds the Jewish male to the Jewish people.   I remember when I was a little kid, I used to take a shower with my father.  I remember looking forward to the day when I could have hair on my chest and a man’s penis hanging there, not a boy’s penis.  Suddenly, it occurred to me that, as the only son, I’m now the “man of the family.”  But what does that mean?   My father was so much more of a “man” when he was my age.  He had a steady job, a steady marriage, and a son. 

“You have none of these.” I thought I heard my penis say to me.

“You’re right,” I said.   

"You know it’s Rosh Hashana in a few days," my penis continued.

"I do."

"The Jewish New Year is the ideal time to make changes in your life.   You can start to become the man you want to be."

My wants as a man have so far been pretty simple so far:  good Chinese food, the open thighs of a woman, and a subscription to HBO.   Maybe it was time to become as accomplished a man as my father.  To know what it actually means to be a man.

"You stood up and said Kaddish at the minyan.  That’s a good start." said my penis, being encouraging. 

"Thank you," I told my friend.

Sophia knocked on the door.

“Hurry up, Neilochka.  I need to use the bathroom.  And… who are you talking to anyway?”

A Walk Around the Block

Today was our last morning of sitting shiva.  In the Jewish tradition, at the end of the shiva, we are supposed to leave the house and walk once around the block.  None of us knew the reason for this tradition, so yesterday, we asked a few of our visitors.  We received many different "answers," including:

1)  to get some exercise after sitting all week.

2)  to show the rest of the neighborhood that you’re done sitting shiva.

3)  to take all your tsuris (Yiddish for trouble) and get rid of it by throwing it on the first neighbor you meet!
 
Then Sophia looked it up online and found the most convincing answer:

Walking around the block is a symbol of the beginning of a return to normalcy.  Also, there is a belief that the soul of the departed hovers around during the shiva, when everyone is talking about the person that died.  In the old country, the cemetery was located at the edge of the shtetl (a village).  At the end of sitting shiva, the bereaved would "escort the soul" to its final resting place.

So many friends and neighbors came this week and said so many beautiful things about my father.  At times, my mother and I gave each other little glances when the praise for my father went over the top.  It’s hard to think of your father or husband in "saintly" terms.  As kind a person as he was, he also had his quirks, and I’d like to remember those as well as his good deeds.  My father did plenty of things that drove me crazy.  He was a neatnik, a hoarder, an obsessive scheduler, and the slowest dresser that ever existed.   But that’s what made him my father.   I want to remember everything about him, good and bad.

I’m not much of a spiritual person, but even I felt my father’s presence as we prepared to take our post-shiva "walk around the block."  When we stepped outside, it was a little windy, so Sophia asked me to go upstairs and get her a jacket.  As I turned back, a wind blew and the front door of the apartment building flew wide-open.  I didn’t think much of it until I went upstairs and found that we had left our front door unlocked from when we were sitting shiva and the wind from the opening elevator made it fly open, too!  It was a little eerie.  But just in case it was my father’s spirit, I said hello to his photo in the living room, and then returned downstairs with a jacket for Sophia.

We took our walk around the block.  It was very emotional.  But as we took each step, things began to feel a little more normal, as we were moving from a state of bereavement back to a regular life.  As we came around the corner, we approached Shoshana, an orthodox Jewish woman who lives in my parents’ building.  Even though she was wearing an ugly skirt, I said to myself, "She has a really nice ass."  I guess I was feeling a little bit more normal.  The wind blew.  I’d like to think that it was my father, agreeing with me about Shoshana’s ass.

A Shanda (Yiddish for Shame)

When I was a kid, Jewish mothers used to compete with each other over their sons’ professions.  Back then, the big battle was between "my son the doctor" and "my son the lawyer." 

No more.

Today while sitting shiva, three middle-aged Jewish Mothers from the apartment building came to visit:

Jewish Mother #1:  So, Neil, are you still in California?

Neil:  Yes, Los Angeles.

Jewish Mother #1:  My son lives in Encino.   He has his dermatology practice there.

Jewish Mother #2:  My son used to live in California.  Then he became a partner at a law firm in Fort Lauderdale.  He loves it there.

Jewish Mother #3:  My son was an ER doctor in Atlantic City.  Then he was fired for gambling during work hours.

Jewish Mother #1:  Molly, what a shanda!

Jewish Mother #2:  This is terrible!

Jewish Mother #3:    Oh, no.  It was the best thing that ever happened to him.  Now he’s a professional poker player and he’s always on that Texas Hold ’em show on the TV.   He’s won three gold bracelets and a few hundred thousand dollars last year.  He even says he’s good friends with Ben Affleck.

All the other mothers went ooh and ahh over "my son, the professional gambler."

Modern Talmudic Question

If a rabbi comes to make a shiva call and there are no available parking spaces outside so he parks "illegally" in the parking-lot of the next-door supermarket, is he required to buy something from the store or is it considered stealing?

Sitting Shiva

My friend, Barry, explained to me how the Catholic wake works:  the family sits facing the open casket for a couple of days.  In the beginning, everyone is all reverent being in the presence of the deceased.  By the end, the family is talking about the Yankees while the body is still there.  After the funeral, the family finds it easier to return to their normal life.  It’s a system that seems to work.

Jews have their own system, which is done the opposite way.  It is called "sitting shiva."  After a death, the burial occurs as fast as possible.  Then there are seven days of sitting shiva.  The family sits in the house and is visited by family, friends, and neighbors.  It is a bit of an odd system, since you end up retelling the story of "what happened" dozens of times, as new people show up.  But since it is a Jewish event, there is always a lot of food involved.  In fact, you are supposed to bring food for the family so they don’t have to cook.  In reality, it doesn’t exactly work out this way.  You are put in the position of being a host to large groups of people at the exact point when you are most exhausted from the funeral.   At least Jews do thing differently.

It is considered a "mitzvah" (a good deed) to "pay a shiva call" so many neighbors come, even those that aren’t close to the family.  A few times, my mother and I didn’t know the names of the people.  Sophia came up with a plan where we would look over at her, signaling  that it was time for action.  Sophia then would stand up and say:

"Hello, I’m Sophia.  Thanks so much for coming.  What’s your name?"

As crazy a system as this is, it is nice to meet all of my father’s friends and co-workers.  We heard some funny stories about my father.  My uncle Edward had the best story, which is about how my father became a physical therapist. 

It seems that during the Korean War, my father was assigned to be an MP (Military Policeman).  This is hard to believe because my father was a scrawny Jewish guy with Woody Allen glasses.  He was assigned to transport North Korean prisoners.  He was issued a large rifle and told to do three things if there was any trouble:

1)   Yell, "Stop."
2)   Yell, "Halt, or I’ll shoot."
3)   Shoot.

One day, my father was transporting a North Korean prisoner, when the prisoner broke free and began to escape.   My father followed the rules: 

1)   He yelled, "Stop," but the prisoner kept on running.
2)   He yelled, "Halt, or I’ll shoot," but the prisoner didn’t listen.
3)   My father lifted up the heavy gun, pulled the trigger, and the gun fell on the floor, shooting into the air.  My father got scared and ran the other way.

Later, that day, my father was brought into the captain’s office.   My father was told that he was going to be court martialed.  The captain took one look at my father and realized that he was the worst possible choice for being a military policeman. 

The captain spoke to my father:

"I made you an MP.  Let’s see if I can do better the second time around.  I’m going to send you to a military hospital in Hawaii to learn to be a physical therapist."

At that point my father would have agreed to anything.  This is how he became a physcial therapist, a job he had for 50 years.

Thanks

At my father’s service, I made a little speech where I talked about my father’s different "families" — his relatives, his co-workers, his friends, etc.  I wonder if at the funerals of the future, people will also be talking about the "family of fellow bloggers and readers."

Who would think I would get such comfort from all your kind comments and emails?  Last night, after the extended family and the shiva visitors left, Sophia and I sat with my mother as she read the comments on my laptop.  She was extremely touched.

I was also surprised about how eager I was to write to you with updates about my life.   When I didn’t have a laptop at the hospital, I wrote some comments on the back of a package of gauze.    I really felt like you were a new kind of family.

I haven’t read any of your blogs, so I have no idea what is going on it your lives (or minds).  Soon, I’ll be back to normal — writing stupid comments on your blogs.

Thank you, my blogging "family."

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