Don’t . . . Give That Girl a Gun

I grew up in a house with guns, and in a neighborhood where families went hunting in the fall in order to have meat in their freezers for the winter.  I’ve handled guns, and shot them and I’ll tell you something that liberals like me don’t often say:   I like shooting.  It’s satisfying to hold a pistol in your two hands, plant yourself, and fire at a target.  (It’s even more satisfying if you actually hit the target, of course.)  It’s a powerful feeling to shoot a gun, and the power is thrilling.

Having said that, I also have to say that my father was an absolute gun safety freak.  He never kept a loaded gun in our home.  We were not a hunting family, but the rifles he and my brothers used for target shooting were kept in locked cases in the bedroom he shared with my mom  — which, unlike my children, we never, ever entered without permission — and the ammunition was in another locked case in the second floor crawl space.  Guns and ammo went into the car in their separate locked cases; after shooting, the guns were cleaned and locked away again for the trip home.

My father’s rule was that you never raised a weapon at someone or something unless you intended to fire at it, and he took it very seriously:  No one could point so much as a water gun at a non-combatant in our house.  When we played cops and robbers, you did not point your toy pistol at people who weren’t participating, like my little sister (or heaven forfend, my dad).

We laughed at my father’s gun rules back then, albeit behind his back.  But today, in the midst of the outrage and sadness of yet another senseless shooting, it occurs to me that my father, a veteran of WWII, understood something profound about guns.  He appreciated their power and their allure, and he had, and insisted that we have, appropriate respect for that power.

My father’s been dead for over 20 years, so I don’t have the chance to argue with him about gun safety.  But while my family will disagree with me, I think he would have supported some of the current gun regulation proposals.  A guy  who insisted that nine-year-olds carry plastic toy cowboy shotguns broken over their arms inside his house would surely  oppose selling military-grade weapons to people on the terrorist watch list or people with mental illness.

Even if those one of those people was his daughter.  I understand the civil liberties issues with these kinds of restrictions.  But I’ve suffered from depression for most of my life.  I am older and wiser now, properly medicated and living a healthy life with people I love and who love me.  But I knew the sadness and hopelessness and the energy it took to keep the ruthless rage I felt — about my helplessness, my inadequacies, my shortcomings and stupidity –in check.  That rage drove me to screaming arguments, to dish throwing, and to a serious suicide attempt.

And here’s the plain and simple and shocking fact:  Had I a gun — God forbid, a gun with a trigger I could hold to fire an endless stream of bullets — on one of the bad days where the rage overtook me and all I wanted was destruction, I would certainly have killed myself with it.  And I would certainly have killed any other innocent within range.

I have worked hard, learned a lot, and have the great good fortune of loving family, good friends, and decent health insurance.  I have tamed my black dog of depression and he lies docile at my feet.  But like my father and his guns, I understand the dog’s power.  And I respect it.

“Don’t Give That Girl A Gun” is the title of an Indigo Girls song.  But really, don’t.  For heaven’s sake, Congress, do your damn job and pass some real gun control.

 

 

 

June 9-12, 2016

Or, What I Learned About Having a Wedding in My Backyard This Weekend

When I said last year to two young people that I love, “Of course you can have your wedding at our house!,” I didn’t know that I would develop a new affinity for  farmers and ski resort owners.  Because by the end of April, my fate would rise and fall on the whims of meteorologists as unseen and capricious as any ancient god.  (I spent the last five weeks checking three weather websites daily.  Sometimes twice a day.  OK.  Sometimes more than twice a day.)

I didn’t know that even in the heart of suburban New Jersey, you could marry a man from Southern India in a ceremony of spice and sound, color and color upon saturated color, spirit profound, primal, and familiar, and the beauty of love made so stunningly visible.  Plus Indian food so good I almost cried.

I learned I could be a wedding planner, but only for a bride and groom of such kindness.  I learned that I could lead a wedding rehearsal, but to be honest I already knew I was pretty good at telling people what to do.  I learned that I could be a wedding officiant — who knew how easy it is to get ordained online?

I learned how much fun it is to have a big white tent in your yard.  It makes it easy for people to find your house and it’s cool and shady the morning after for coffee and bagels and lingering with family on their way home.

This Monday morning I still see the bride in her red and gold sari, her henna-ed hands, the priest’s orange robes and his palms yellow with turmeric, the groom’s magnificent turban, his mother s eyes huge with love and pride, yellow and orange and read and white flower garlands, rice cascading off their heads . . .

I see her uncle on a ladder hanging white tulle and giant white paper flowers, the threat of rain sliced away by the sun as the groom’s brother arrives in a rush, beautiful wife and two-month old twins in tow, I see red rose petals on my driveway, her mother’s tears, chocolate cake on her Vera Wang dress . . .

I see them on Sunday morning, husband now and wife, ordinary people again but still shiny with love and with hope.  And I keep that love and that hope with me after they go with their gifts and the leftover cake and her bouquet of white roses still fresh . . .

I keep it with me that afternoon when I toast pine nuts and slice oranges to put in a salad to bring to a memorial service for my friend Cyd — a woman much too young to die –whose calm and generous spirit soothed me and whose wide smile cheered me during a hard time.  I keep it with me when I cry for her husband and daughters and family and friends and for myself, all of whose lives will be less bright without her.

I keep it with me when I read about the 50 victims in Orlando, whose light and love and beauty were butchered by madness, ignorance and hate.  I keep it with me when I think about their families, whose grief for their brothers and sisters and husbands and sons and daughters gone too soon like Cyd must surely be sharper for the horror.

What I learned from having a wedding in my backyard this weekend is that you can do everything in your power to do and rain can always come and love can be a shelter no matter how bad the storm.