Ritz Kracka

Ritz Kracka

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Is THIS Why I’m Still Single? 1/21/15



I had been bragging all week last week about how I had a “meet-and-greet” date on Saturday.  Wow did I count MY chickens too soon.


It was not until the next day when I checked in with a male friend of mine and got smacked up-side of the head with a very real “Oh yeah, he’s not gonna call” did it dawn on me that perhaps the reason why I am single has something to do with my approach.  Seriously?

The “offending” text between me and potential suitor three days prior to our “meet and greet:”

He: Hi Maureen. 

Me: Is this Gr@g?  I had been anticipating a telephone call…

(we had scheduled the date via the dating app and i had requested that he give me a telephone call prior to our date. this is just something i do.)
 
He: Yes, it is. 

Me: So, um.  Is this text in place of or in addition to a telephone call?

He: In addition to.

Me: Yeeeeeeee-Hawwwwwwww! Can we talk later on then?

He: Yes.

(forgive me here, dear reader, but if you are going to begin what was supposed to be a telephone conversation with a text, then you had better keep up your end of the conversation...ahem.)

Me: (several minutes later) Man of few words, you are -

He: Sorry, its been a long day. 

(he obvs. missed my clever Yoda reference)

Me: Well, we can keep it virtual tonight if that works better for you.  Just keep in mind that i'm going to need you to add a little more ‘flair’ to your texts.

...

Crickets.  He obvs. didn’t catch my clever “Office  Space” reference.  

Me: OK, ok, I will dial it down a notch.  

...

Nada. 


A couple of hours later, I showed the offending text thread to the Sun.

He stared at the phone for a few moments and then started to shake his head, slowly back and forth. 

“Mom.  Do you want me to fix this train wreck?”

“Yes, Tre!  What happened?  What should I do?"

He looks at the phone again. 

“well, um.  Have you called him yet?"

What a novel idea.  Calling someone.  :o/


I showed the offending thread to my male office-mate the next morning.

“Yeah, Maureen, um…he’s not gonna call.”

I get it.  I really do.  Way too much.  Here’s the rub:  I’m at a stage where I could give two fucks really, that my *special* brand of humor does not translate well. ..and in particular with a total stranger,  who whimped out of a real-time interaction in favor of a virtual one.

And THIS, my friends, is why, at age 46, I am still single.

signing off on a friday night, 10:06 p.m. PST fresh from my 3rd viewing of "Bridesmaids."

meatz 'n cheezes.  

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

1/3/2015 – The Marriage of Me and Me.




So I did it – on the eve of the Full Moon.  I got married.  To me.

My vows? Well, i began stressing about these - like clockwork - the night before the big day!  I wanted everything to be perfect.  I mean, I’m only gonna marry myself ONCE in my lifetime (hopefully!).  Then I remembered: the love letter I wrote to myself on my 33rd birthday, 2001, when I had left my husband.  Perfect.   




May 4th, 2001

My Dearest Maureen –

It has been too long, far too long since I have written to you.  Since I have expressed my truest, deepest feelings of love towards you.  I promise not to let time slip by like that again.  You are far too special, far too precious to me.   

From the deepest part of my soul grows the love I feel for you.  I feel it in my toes spread upwards until it engulfs my entire body.   Your eyes, lips, caramel-colored skin all beam, shine lightness and beauty.  A beauty that I have never witnessed before.  A beauty so soft, pure, and warm that it fills my heart with joy.   

You are the great beauty I have wished for my entire life.  You make my life so complete, so whole.  To lose you would be to lose myself…an experience I have gone through before in my lifetime.  An experience that is so painful, I would not wish it on my least favorite person.

Yes, my dear Maureen, we have had our turbulent times, our ups and downs, our trials and tribulations.  Through it all, I have held you deep in my heart.  For I know that you are a precious gift to me.  I only hope, Maureen, that I have done the same for you.

Maureen, it hurts me deeply to see you hurt, to see you cry, fret, struggle.  When I look at you, I see all the beauty, joy, compassion, love, emanating from your golden aura.  I only wish I had the power to reflect back my image onto you.  To allow you to see what I see.  If only you were able to catch one glimpse of yourself from my eyes, I am certain that all the doubts, feats, insecurities you carry about yourself would melt away, like the first snow on a warm fall day.  
On the Eve of my wedding, the moon from my back porch, Oakland, CA.
Maureen, my darling, I want to dance with you through the meadows on a golden afternoon.  I want to stroll along the beach, nude, with the warm sun baking our bodies.  I want to hug you on your 90th birthday! 


I am so honored to be in your life.  To share with you your hopes, dreams, fears and pleasures.  Please be a part of my life, for now and always.  You have my heart. 


                                Forever yours,

                               
                                Maureen 


Whole-y Matrimony - 1/3/2015


Friday, January 2, 2015

NYE 2014 – ECSTATIC DANCE – Oakland, California, U.S.A.

Sometime in early December, 2014:

As I sit here pondering where I can get a good booty-shake on, I find myself, once again, thinking about taking my narrow, high-yellow a$$ down the street to Ecstatic Dance at the Sweets Ballroom in Oakland.  This thought is followed by a very frustrated:

“Goddammit!  Why isn’t there a Black Ecstatic Dance?”  

Followed immediately by a somber:

“Oh, right, that’s called “A Night Out Dancing.” 

Meh.  It’s my problem, really.  There is nothing wrong with Ecstatic Dance.  The originators of this event have created a really good thing: a space in which one is free to explore this incredible expression of human form, called “dance.”  The fact that 95% of the folks who attend this event are white is merely a commentary on how our *dominant* American culture has managed to turn something beautiful and uniquely expressive into something coarse, dirty, and sinful. "Footloose,"  anyone?  Or what about "Dirty Dancing?"  The by-product of this cultural programming?  All of the coarse, dirty and sinful expression that has been pent up in our *dominant* culture for years and years and years has come out in the form of wild abandon, inconsideration for one's fellow dancer and...Contact Improv.  What is Contact Improv you ask?  Others will tell you different, but simply put, it is a style of movement that legitimizes for white folks all of that bumping and grinding on the dance floor that black ppl have been doing for yeeeeaars!  Seriously: one time in college, the dance got so heated that when folks walked off the floor after a particularly *hot* set, I saw one dude with a wet stain on the front of his pants. OK OK OK, to be fair, there is absolutely nothing in the Contact Improv manual that says anything about Contact Improv having anything to do with our innate sexuality and raunchiness.  (snicker.)

Dancing is, in a word: AWESOME.  When I see dance done really well, like Alvin Ailey well, or even In Living Color “Fly Girl” well, I can get mesmerized.  And although I wouldn't necessarily say that the dancing that goes on at  Ecstatic Dance is "dance done really well," or even particularly inspiring,  i will say this: for me, Ecstatic Dance is a catalyst for free expression, and who doesn't need more of that in their lives?

Ever since I can remember, there has been a divide in my world that runs straight down color lines when it comes to dancing.  Quite simply: black ppl can dance, white pp cannot.  And that is not to say white ppl cannot dance at ALL, no-way, no-how.  Because you see, there’s Polka, Waltz, and Ball dancing.  There is also swing dancing and country too!   I myself was brought up on Swedish line dancing and can do a mean Holiday line dance that takes the entire party through the entire house!  What it means is that white ppl don’t have the Milkshake in their dance; simply put: they don't have what it takes to "..bring all the boys to the yard.” i could teach you, but i'd have to charge.

And while we can all agree that the above statement is indeed an oversimplification, a generalization, and we could go back and forth about whether this statement  is statistically “true” and if so, why, let’s just scrap all that for sake of getting to the point:  in my world growing up, I learned to dance by frequenting the black clubs in Denver, with my black girlfriends, where black music was played.  And when I say black music, I mean, like, rhythm and blues, disco, soul, hip-hop, that kind of stuff.  So I was able to exorcise a modicum of what I will refer to as “rhythm” out of this-here body, even growing up in my fairly-well-white-washed environment.  

Same theme in college at the University of Arizona, things were fairly segregated: there were white frats, black frats, and parties/music that ran along color lines.  I was not a soror, but I was an athlete with brown skin, so I defaulted to the dark side.  Plus, by the time I entered my first year in college, I had clearly chosen a side, at least insofar as my sexual relations were concerned - or should I say the side chose me:  I had my first-ever boyfriend as a high school senior and he was black.  Since black chose me, I said yes.  well, kind of, but that's a different blog.

What creates the conditions under which one feels free to express themselves, fully?  Fully, fully, fully, without abandon?  The answer for me is: a felt sense of safety.    Safety from what?  The easiest answer would be from judgment – because ultimately, to judge is to condemn is to be “outcast” from your clan, and who wants to be outcast?  Except of course, OutKast.

The point is this: I express myself fully under conditions in which I feel no fear of being “cast-out.”  I am pretty certain to some degree, this feeling is universal, since we are social creatures.  However, by dancing - among other things - I have come to find out that this particular *fear* is a fabrication of my imagination, borne from the environment in which I am steeped that constantly bombards me with messages that not only am I "other," but my "otherness" is the wrong kind of "other."  When I express myself with dance, it is more than just a lack of separation; it is a fullness too, of EVERYTHING.

Here is the rub: dancing as I did in a circle of black women just a few short weeks ago (read about that here), I felt awkward and other.  Here, at Ecstatic Dance, I feel invisible, if not illuminated from the inside-out. 


12/31/2014, 9:00 p.m.
Here we are, NYE 2014.  And here i am, Ecstatic Dance, Oakland, California, USA.   I am excited to be here, out, by myself and ready to express 2015 into being!  When right in front of me, i witness two Contact Improv dancers getting super-personal.  And its not even 9:30 yet....jeezus, save something for the grand finale, whydontcha?!?   I look the other way.  Until i hear what sounds like the woman having an extremely involved orgasm.  I look over.  She is down on the floor, straddling his legs.  He is holding her, gripping her, I dont know, "taking in" her orgasm?  I look away and let them have their private moment - in public.  Like i said, it's really my problem.  And im not getting laid.

10:00 p.m.
I have been dancing for almost an hour and I feel great!  I feel self-expressed and free. And, I also notice a fairly large ( 3 - 4) group of brown and black women in the front right corner of the stage, next to the speaker.  At first i grip: are they judging me?  When I realize my own projection, I go back to minding my own business, and I am so pleased that they are here!  

I see the contact improv dancers of earlier  - they are apparently now in Phase II of their dance.  I notice that she is very bald and wonder briefly if perhaps she has terminal cancer and is doing all of the things she never, ever did and doesn't want to regret not doing now that her time on Earth is suddenly shortened.  I know this is a morbid thought, but based on this NEW story, I feel guilty for being so judgmental about her PDA's earlier and begin dancing next to them in an attempt to neurtalize their sexual energy so that nobody else is as bothered as i am.  Instead i am reminded again that i am not getting laid.

11:45 p.m. 
There are very good drummers here now and I am up in front letting the holy spirit move through me.  Yes I have taken some African dance lessons before, but this is the moment when self-expression takes on a life of its own, and the music moves me!  It is as if my body knows what to do, how to move, as long as I am willing to "let go."  Which is something that i find most difficult.  I'm a gripper.  

This is a Fenton's Black and Tan and I can
 devour the entire confection on my own.
January 1, 2015 12:02 a.m.
I want chocolate.  Lots 'n lots of chocolate.  And caramel too!  Oh, and whipped cream....something like a Fenton's Black and Tan. 

I remember that its now midnight and Fenton's is not open at this hour. 

DAMN U FENTONS!!!! (shakes angry, weary fist at Fenton's).

The female contact improv dancer of earlier has chosen a new partner...I am wondering if she did indeed save herself for the finale.  

12:15 a.m.
A new d.j. takes over who will going until 2a.m.  I wonder: do I have just *one more* dance in me?  no. 

12:25 a.m. 
Quick stop at the 7-11 for Ben n Jerry's.  

12:35 a.m.
FYI - Ben 'n Jerry's new "Karamel Sutra Core" ice cream is a rip-off as the caramel "Core" only goes 1/2 way down the container.  Bad Karma for Ben 'n Jerry.  :o/

January 1, 2015:

This is going to be a good one.