Holidays Alone

Is their chosen aloneness an incredibly decisive act of self-determination?

My TV is out tonight. Okay. So, I thought I might unwind and rest my head by listening to a podcast. Some radio.

You might have also listened to the November 17th version of “This American Life.” There is a story of a 79-year old woman named Maryann who walked into a hospital alone and died there. It follows the story of a young woman named Emily whose job it is to claim her things at the hospital, go through her house and figure out who to inform, how to find family or loved ones. This particular woman left nearly no personal items, but had a house full of things. She cocooned herself in this place.

They talk to her neighbors. They barely know her. The only clue is a 30 year-old Christmas card written from a man who claims he doesn’t know her until he realizes that she is in fact his great-aunt.

On her answering machine was the message, “This is a message from No Name, No Number, No Message, No Answer.”

I wonder if she was happy. I wonder if this was all exactly as she wanted it.

Then, there was a young man named Clevins who lived alone at 15. He spoke of the joy of being able to make up his own room after a nomadic childhood. After his mother got sick, he decided to not tell anyone about it so that he could avoid being put into the foster care system.

And I wondered, is this one of the last things that we can have any control over? Our home and when and under what conditions people enter our space. When we walk out into the world. And what the course of our path is. Is their chosen aloneness an incredibly decisive act of self-determination?

“Dear _________”

Write the letter you have always wanted to write.

I did the following as a play for Dominic D’Andrea’s One Minute Play Festival a couple of weeks ago. I had audience members fill them out and then had a few of them read. It’s my take on a Mad-Lib play. So, now I’m throwing it out there. It came to me because a number of people were making me very angry and I wanted to tell them off. And I thought, wouldn’t it be nice if there were a form for that.

So, take your turn. Cut and paste it into the comment box and fill it out. Hit me back with your letters.

Write the letter you have always wanted to write.

Dear ____________,

This is to let you know that I am leaving you. You are going to ask, “Why?” And I will be honest. When you _________________(action), I feel like _______________________(adjective or similie or metaphor). When you _________________(action), my _________________(body part) _____________(verb). Your _________________ (person, place, thing, habit) and your ____________________(person, place, thing, habit) ______________(verb) me. But most importantly, when you __________________(action), I just don’t ________________(verb) you anymore. I hope you ___________________(verb). Maybe someday, __________________________.

(Please circle) Love, Sincerely, Best regards, Signed, Yours, With Regrets,

______________________(Your name)

Taking Over

i was talking about this play with some partners in crime from the women’s project tonight about this show and i was thinking i should get the word out and ask people to go, if they can. there are even $20 rush seats. i know it’s a lot in these trying economic times, but it’s possibly the stuff of changing the status quo.

i am of course talking about taking over by danny hoch at the public theater. i think it’s really incredible that he’s taken a form he helped to popularize and really take on the gentrification of williamsburg, and really, this whole city. his performance is for the most part nuanced and when he does an entire scene as a dominican car service dispatcher and a developer, inspired.

i’ve been thinking that this is what theater is for–to ask difficult questions. and it is nice to see someone asking us all to consider the question though he does not have the answer either. what we need, what he begs us to do, is to ponder this together.