He really wanted to go. He really wanted to see Bernie.
My friend was visiting for the weekend, and I had made plans for a special
evening. I had a nice dinner ready (spaghetti with red pepper sauce, asparagus,
lemon tart), and then we were going to go to a symphony and choir concert at the
Colleges here in Claremont – they were doing Camina Burana by Carl Orff. It was
going to be special.
It was a special visit. My friend, Carl Sigmond, and I had met for the
first time last summer at Pacific Yearly Meeting after hearing about each other
for years. We had exchanged emails since July, but this was his first time in
Claremont. He has Cerebral Palsy like I do, uses a power wheelchair like I do,
and has impaired speech like I do, and he came here on the train on his own from
where he lives and works in Nevada City, CA, a good eight hours away. I like how he is very independent
and very smart and how he is not afraid of doing things. I like how he is a lot
like me. I haven’t had anyone in my life quite like him, quite like me, at least
in a very long time.
I had this nice plan – to make his last evening here special – but then we
heard that Bernie Sanders was speaking in Los Angeles that afternoon. He looked
online and saw that we could go see him, and he really wanted to go, saying that
he loves Bernie and that this was a great chance to see him. He was so excited
that I knew that Carl Orff and a symphony and mass choir wouldn’t cut it.
So we took off in our wheelchairs, with all our devices and gadgets. The
plan was for the two of us to catch the 4:17 p.m. train a few blocks from my
house, get off at Union Station, and then go a few blocks to the park in front
of City Hall where Bernie would address a May Day rally. Carl would text my
attendants on the phone mounted on his chair and let them know where and when to
pick us up in my van, since the trains don’t run late on Saturday. We would all
go out to dinner on Olvera Street. That was the plan. Sweet!
The train ride gave Carl and I time to talk and get to know each other
more. It gave us time to learn more how to speak to one another, how to
understand each other, how to position ourselves to see more of each
other.
In L.A., we ventured out and zipped through the crowds and over the rough
streets and sidewalks, passing over the US-101 freeway. We each had ideas of the
best route to get to City Hall, and we kept catching up with each other. I did
most of the catching up, as Carl got more and more excited and could barely stay
in his chair, ecstatic to see Bernie.
When we got to the park, there was a crowd with banners and chanting and
all the things you would expect – I was right at home in my overalls – but it
was nothing like the Sanders rallies you see on T.V. Carl, maybe sensing that
something was up and being considerably less shy about speaking to strangers
than I am, asked a person in a bright red Bernie shirt where Bernie was to be
speaking, expecting full well that we would have to stand in line, go through
security, etc.. Carl knew the drill. The woman replied, “Mmm… I don’t... He
might not be here. I don’t know. That would be nice.” In other words, Bernie
wasn’t coming – sort of like Godot. The woman, with kind, smiling eyes, was
letting us down as gently as she could, albeit in a patronizing tone. (I later
read that Sanders was in Washington, D.C. at a national press dinner and that
this L.A. gathering was essentially a May Day labor rally. Carl realized later
that the Sanders campaign website had it listed as a Bernie Sanders rally,
rather than an official event.)
Carl was bummed and quite embarrassed, knowing how excited I had been for
the special evening in Claremont. He told me that he was sorry, and we returned
to Union Station, where we talked more while we waited for my attendants to come
with my van and go out to dinner with us.
But I wasn’t sorry. I wasn’t sorry at all – about not having the dinner I
planned and not going to the concert, about going all the way to L.A. and
finding out that Bernie Sanders wouldn’t be there. As far as I was concerned, we
had seen Bernie. Or, at least, we had felt the bern.
I sure felt it. I felt the bern when I said okay and took off on the train
with my new disabled friend, leaving my attendants far behind. I felt it in the
freedom in being able to take off, together, in our wheelchairs, to go somewhere
30 miles away on our own. I felt the bern in the ability and the opportunity for
us, with our eye-catching spasms and our hard-to-understand speech, to go where
we want and do what we want, just like anyone else, just like any two
friends.
No. I wasn’t sorry at all. What Carl and I did that day, feeling the bern,
was so much better than any Orff concert. (And this one was pretty good when I
went to the second performance the next afternoon after my friend left to return
home.)
[Thanks to Carl for some editing and tweaking here - and more.]
Sweet story about two good friends I wish I could easily see more often. Hugs to you both John and Carl.
ReplyDeleteWhat a moving story, John. Thank you for posting this! Hope you have more times ahead with your new friend, Carl! And I've been missing you at gatherings of FLGBTQC. Sending love and blessings, Polly (Attwood, Cambridge, MA)
ReplyDeleteAh two of my favorite people in the same park. That is a delicious thought. Thanks for sharing this experience on your blog. So glad you and Carl connected. He is one of our finest East Coast exports! (Some free trade is good--ideas, Friends, love)
ReplyDeleteFriends brining spontaneity is a pretty cool thing. So glad you 'rolled' with the adventure and it worked out just fine. Thanks for sharing the tale. Sorry you didn't see Bernie. I saw him arrive at the San Deigo event 6 weeks ago and he was clearly very excited to be there. Hope to run into to you soon. Hugs my friend.
ReplyDelete