Tag Archives: women

Of Awnings and Peaches…

Draft Chapter, Nightfall In Verona – copyright 2010 Jenne’ R. Andrews

“Dare I Eat a Peach?”  – Prufrock, T.S. Eliot


After my summer southern Italian amore  Pepe goes to work, I head out alone to explore the narrow streets of Turin.  I carry a small basket with a red- checked napkin in it to cover fruit and bread.  I am in a fresh pair of bell-bottom jeans, a pink knit shirt I bought in the market in Reggio.  I have brushed my hair and tied it back with one of the now worn elastic twist ties Julia gave me at the beginning of our journey.

The Turinese villas on either side of the cobbled street are ancient, delicate, walls a golden tan stucco over brick.  Here and there the stucco has peeled away.  Golden and pale pink roses climb sun-bleached trellises.  Baskets of red geraniums gleam from the balconies like a flush of hearts in an ongoing card game.

I have not been alone in days.  I have been glued to my lover’s side, hearing him say tenderly, each time I have objected to walking at nearly a right angle wherever we have gone, “Va bene; e’ cosi.”  ”It’s o.k.  That’s the way it is..”  read, we do it this way, in my country. I stop short of telling him that I am in grueling pain.

He has kissed kissed kissed me every few feet on the street, sometimes grabbing me under the chin, insuring that I will develop a dewlap before I am thirty.

On the bus in Rome, when he did this for the fortieth time– make that the hundredth time in our six weeks together– we had toasted to each other at a bistro with a whole pitcher of cold white wine.

As the bus lurched and swayed to the outskirts of Rome, people slumped over their newspapers at the end of a long day of work, he smiled at me, and grabbed the skin under my chin– the sequence was grab, pinch, bite the lips, clinch, kiss, tongue half way down the throat and a smack on the lips for good measure.  Generally speaking I loved these kisses and returned them with abandon when we were alone; this time,  I watched my arm and hand shoot up and slap him.

I was horrified.  But he had laughed, taking my hand and kissing it, and the other Italians on the bus back to the palazzo where we were visiting his eldest sister had applauded.  This was impromptu opera.

Now, distracted by a myriad of such memories, I remember that I have an extra stop to make before I go to the market– to a pharmacy, a farmacia– the c being pronounced like ch, the word spoken with an accent on the next to the last syllable, with a song-like cadence.  I have finally run out of birth control. I have squeezed the last sperm-blasting glob of jelly out of the tube of ortho-gynol I brought to Europe at the bottom of my duffel bag into my diaphragm.

Notwithstanding that my amore, on one of the nights of revelry with his family,  in a moment in which I took his newborn niece into my arms had looked at me with that “I would love to get you pregnant right now” gleam in his eye, I have diligently tried to protect myself, soothing him when he was pinched by my device during our stratospheric lovemaking.

In the meantime I have run out of patience with peeing into gratings in the street behind listing plywood partitions like a dog squatting in a park.  From the moment I got off the plane I have made concessions to how it is in Europe, finding ways to stay clean.  I haven’t asked my friends how they do it; despite our traveling together in our vacation-rigged VW bus, some things have remained unspoken.

I am stuck with the practice of casual open-air elimination of urine, and hiking several blocks to a semi- partitioned pooping station requiring a little less flexibility and balance,  but I decide to try to find another tube of contraceptive jelly for my diaphragm, and to buy a discreet little douche kit, like we have in the States.  Just taking care of me will offset the tension I have born up under over being indelibly American and contemporary in a world embedded in antiquity and things practical but too out in the open for a spoiled American regazza like me.

In order to enter the pharmacy,with its scalloped and rounded awning, “Farmacia” written in large italic on it, I must steel myself for the stares I will get from the men who enter and leave.  Men go to the farmacia for their wives.  The women may go to the market and to church.  The rest of the time it is expected that they will stay indoors, cooking, as in making pasta from scratch,  cleaning, suckling, changing and soothing babies, scrubbing the laundry in the sink and hanging it to dry on the balcony, and be ready to succor their husbands in a jackhammer clench far into the night when the bedside lamp is turned off.

I brace myself, and go in.  The pharmacy is dark and mysterious.  There is no rhyme or reason to where things are.  The aisles are narrow and small bottles and boxes with over the counter pills for various ailments  in them are piled on top of each other on dusty shelves.

From the back, a young man with black-rimmed glasses and slicked back hair in a white coat approaches.  He looks stunned.

Where to start.  Sign language is not an option; no rude gestures approximating the act of intercourse to provide a context for my request allowed.

“Ho bisogno contracepcion,” I say:  I need contraception, hoping that the word that may exist in some version in Spanish, resonates with the pharmacist.

He looks at me as if I’m the jealousy-crazed ghost in Lucia di Lammermoor, arising from the lake.

I follow him to the back of the store where there are rows of packaged condoms. I don’t trust these where Mr. Sempre Duro– “Always Hard” (his self-mocking nickname for himself, not mine)–  is concerned.  I attempt to explain that I am looking for jelly for my diaphragm.

Perhaps I said, “I have cockroaches in my kitchen, ” because after a long and thoughtful pause, he hands me a small box, labeled “Tarot Cap.”

In my mind’s eye I am placing little Tarot Cap ant bait “hotels” at the baseboards of my apartment in St. Paul.

For only a few seconds I wonder about the impact upon my future fertility of putting an insecticide in my diaphragm– if this is an insecticide.  I try to decipher the label.  I catch words alluding to feminine hygiene, something resembling the word “spermacide.”  The Tarot Cap Corporation, wherever it is, possibly in China, has evidently expanded its product line.  The idea of flying home pregnant with triplets has been unappealing from the beginning; Tarot Cap it is.

Now I must summon all of my courage.

Douche is surely an acceptable word to utter in Europe.  It is French and although it is often appropriated and appended to the word “bag” to insult politicians back in the U.S., I hope for the best. I carefully attempt to state that I need to buy douching apparatus–  ”..cosa feminina per lavare…”  something feminine with which to wash…”– my best shot.

Now he looks astounded.  He takes his glasses off and wipes them on his coat and puts them back on.

“Signorina,” he says.  ”Quelli son per gli madri….”

Those things are for mothers.

I hold my ground, folding my arms and looking him right in the eye.  How do you know I’m not a mother?

He walks around the corner to another row of jumbled toiletries, and comes back around with a shoe-box sized package with a cellophaned window.

I look in the box.

There is the largest bulb syringe I have ever seen, with the longest and thickest inflexible nozzle imaginable.

Why am I suprised.  The sanitary napkins in Italy are the size of saddle blankets because everyone is serially pregnant, either bleeding profusely or great with child. But this thing would flush the uterus of an elephant.

In Calabria, we had gone into a farmacia– that is to say– I had sent Pepe in for tampons.  He was gone for over an hour and came out with a huge paper bag, exhausted, saying, “Jenni– in Italia, tamponi non c’e.”  We don’t have tampons in Italy.

Inside the bag had been a huge bag of cotton balls and a ten ft. roll of gauze bandaging.  At that point, having begun to adapt to life in wholly Catholic country, only a few steps north of living covered in black  in Islam, I had rolled my own.

Now my practical side again comes to the fore. This will double as a fire extinguisher if our hot plate catches fire, I think, plunking down my lire, watching him pack up my purchases into yet another plain brown paper bag. I brim with pride at my own courage and resourcefulness.

I go back into the day, heading back up the street to the market that has flowered under the windows of the dorm at the University of Turin where we have been staying in his room for a few days.  We will leave in the morning for Verona, and I want to make a last lover’s dinner.

Prostitutes with wild hair and over-lipsticked mouths stand on the corners with miniskirts up past shoreline.  A woman appears in one of the balconies over the market, lugging a wicker basket filled to the brim with freshly washed laundry.  She strings a clothesline between her shutters.

Then she bursts into song, in a quavery contralto:  ”Chi non lavore non fare amore…”  He who doesn’t work doesn’t make love….

Other women come out onto their balconies with laundry.  They laugh and call to each other in the morning sun.

I look down at the long shadow I cast across the cobblestones.  Suddenly there is a lump in my throat.  Why couldn’t I stay, as he had begged me to?  Why couldn’t I let go and trust that we would love on and that I would still write, that I wouldn’t lose myself?

I turn away to the fruit piled high in the bins of the market.  I lay my hands on ripe peaches, needing to hold on to something.


We Women, “There” for One Another…or Not…

I’ve just taken a peek at the first chapter of a  ”debut” novel by a woman I used to know back in my salad days within the seemingly safe harbor of the Minnesota literary scene.

There were four writers per city block back then, and it appears, as I surf around, that there are at least eight today.

Those were golden times for me; I had real support and was part of a real community, with real friends.  That’s three “real’s”— really.  I was blessed with a number of good things– the attention of National Book Award winner Robert Bly, who founded the Minnesota Writers Publishing House, a collective, and edited my first chapbook, In Pursuit of the Family. I received a National Endowment for the Arts Award in Literature, as a poet.  I was appointed full-time Poet in Residence for the St. Paul Schools– a job I held down for four years before returning to Colorado after my father died and I had to come home.

Together with the woman whose book I noticed last night and perused a little this morning, and other women, we organized for one another to break into what had been a male dominion for the most part. Google Women Poets of the Twin Cities and you’ll find a collector’s item.

I still remember being invited to this young writer’s apartment for dinner.  I even remember that she made something with brown rice and fresh vegetables in it.  I remember that I was having a very rough time, and had started to talk to her when she stopped me.

“What makes you think I want to hear about all of your problems?”  she asked.  ”What makes you assume that I’m even interested?”

I remember how it felt to take this in the solar plexus, and the shame that drenched me.

This is not an isolated incident in my experience.  Can there be anything more painful than to take a hit from another woman?  I doubt it. Many of us have had hard lessons where men are concerned, but don’t we view other women as sisters, as other mirror images of Eve herself?

And remembering this makes me feel that we should all take a long hard look at what we mean when we use the word “community” or the word “network” –and especially, the word “friend”: are we honest?  Do we really value each other?

Those of us who keep on despite uphill battles, who have overcome many obstacles and are still fully clothed and in our right minds, much less engaged in a writing life, should be accorded all due respect.   Period.  We have not walked in each other’s moccasins.

For me there is but one overall solution: to enjoy community, and the building of platforms but not depend upon these things.  To support one another with gentle honesty and sustained communication: the two biggies, but to never assume that you are making a life-long friend, even though that can and does happen.

And most of all, because people do get claimed by their own daily lives, and  fallings out are part of being human,   to cultivate self-love and not need anyone else  to tell us that we are  good writers or bad,  or that our lives and work have beauty, meaning and purpose.

We have all heard this ad nauseam but perhaps that’s because it is true: without self-love and self-respect,  it doesn’t matter who validates you:  it could be God herself.


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