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Cuddles

 

“Cuddles” is not your local lady of p . . . leisure.  She, or he, is you, and me.

Skin to skin contact is important for every human being.  A great deal of research has indicated that infants who lack enough physical touch may never achieve full emotional development.  In 2010 Katherine Harmon reported in The Scientific American, “. . . many stories of delayed development and troublesome behavior, such as in the seven-year-old Russian orphan who was returned by his adoptive family in the U.S. in April 2010, have spurred researchers to take an even closer look into the effects of early contact deprivation.”

Maybe part of me is still a baby but for me, as one member of an adult couple, physical contact remains essential.  It reinforces the connection between me and my partner.  Physical contact always comforts me.  Occasionally I even tell Daveen that I need to cling to her.  Sometimes I don’t even know why.  She has always been available, without question or hesitation.

I also like physical contact while walking.  In addition to the pleasure of connection I can maintain greater stability.  I’m less likely to fall.  Two or three times a year I stumble.  When I’m physically connected to the person I’m walking with, I keep my balance better.  And they stay upright as well.  I am touched every time my father, now one hundred years old, interlocks his arm with mine as we walk together toward a restaurant, or up a flight of stairs.  After more than thirty five years I am still thrilled when Daveen reaches her arm around my waist as, for example, we admire a particularly beautiful sunset.

At the beginning of our relationship my second wife, Susan, was uncomfortable with any public display of affection, including holding hands while we walked along a sidewalk.  Fortunately, it didn’t take her long to grow used to touching and being touched — even my arm around her shoulder or my hand holding her at the waist.  Sometimes she even held on to me.  I liked that.  I still do.  How do you know you’re really together unless at least part of your connection is physical?

Of course, our need for physical contact goes far beyond the sidewalk, and all the way to the bedroom.  I’m not talking about sex here.  I’m talking about physical contact, in this case cuddling.

Whether we have made love or not, whether we’re tired or not, Daveen and I have cultivated the habit of cuddling as we lie in bed each night before we fall asleep.  It is one of the treats of my life when she falls asleep first, her breath slowing, her body relaxing into my arms.  I feel Daveen trusting me with herself, and that is a high compliment indeed.  It speaks to the very essence of our marriage.

Each of us is alone enough every day, and that is normal and natural.  Few of us are, or would want to be, Siamese twins. But let’s end the day, or begin it, with a cuddle.

“The Peerless Quartet” recorded a song more than one hundred years ago, yet it’s a song you may remember.  Here’s the refrain.  You might try inserting “Cuddles” for “Sweetheart.”  I often do.

Let me call you “Sweetheart,” I’m in love with you. 

Let me hear you whisper that you love me too.

Keep the love-light glowing in your eyes so true.

Let me call you “Sweetheart,” I’m in love with you.

Alan

 

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Catching a Feather

 

When we were kids, my brother and I had the mother of all pillow fights. It ended with a shriek of glee when David swatted me squarely on the top of my head. His pillow burst, liberating thousands of feathers. For weeks afterward gypsy bits of white fluff roamed through our house, rising from dresser drawers, drifting out of folded clothes, and even, to my surprise, peeking out from the corner of a small red carton of cloves in the kitchen pantry.

But each time I tried to trap one of these feathers with my hand it fluffed away. At first I was amused, but soon I became frustrated. In those days I lived by the rule, “go for it,” which simply didn’t work in this case.

You have to wait for the fish to bite, and I quickly learned that to catch a feather I had to be patient, reach out, and simply wait for it to land, or not, on my outstretched palm.

__________________

The softest things in the world overcome the hardest things in the world. Non-being penetrates that in which there is no space. Through this I know the advantage of taking no action.

—Lao-Tzu, The Way of Lao-Tzu

__________________

Recently my business partner, Aaron, cornered me in my office. “Alan, I have a problem. My son, your godson, Byron, and I had an argument about the rules in our house, and he won’t talk to me.”

Aaron’s quarrel was about Byron and his girlfriend sleeping in Byron’s bedroom overnight, with Aaron’s seven-year-old stepdaughter in the house.

“Alan, I don’t want to lose my son. But I won’t change the rules in my own house. What can I do?”

I recalled the day many years before when my own teenage son had decided to live with his mother, rather than accept one of my household rules. Eventually I had apologized, not so much for the rule but for my harsh way of imposing it, and we reconciled. In my mind I saw a feather gradually floating into my hand.

“Don’t chase him,” I said to Aaron.

“Don’t chase him?”

“Just extend your hand to him and wait for him to respond.”

“I have been waiting. For a week. And it hurts.”

“Waiting can be the hardest thing in the world, especially for people like you and me who are used to going after what we want. Children have to stake out their own territory.”

Aaron shook his head, looking sad. “I don’t like it, but you may be right.”

For several weeks, Aaron left welcoming messages on Byron’s telephone answering machine and waited. Byron finally returned his calls, and, after more than a month, father and son agreed to share dinner at a Chinese restaurant. They opened up a dialogue that continued intermittently over the next few months.

Then last Friday, Aaron raced into my office, beaming, “The feather has landed!” Aaron paused for dramatic effect.

“Yes?”

“Tonight he’s coming to the house for dinner, for the first time since Christmas!”

I hadn’t seen Aaron grin so broadly since he announced his engagement to his wife several years before (but that’s a feather off a different bird).

To catch a feather you have to wait. You can’t speed up the natural process of floating, and the very attempt will push away the object of your desire. 

You can only be available, as you might be to a newborn infant. You can open your heart and turn your palm upward toward the sky. You can wait and watch with yearning and generosity.

When the feather alights you can give thanks for a precious gift.

And you might also realize that, from time to time, you are the feather yourself.

– Alan

 

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Six Lessons from My Father’s 100th Birthday Party

 

I just returned from my father’s 100th birthday celebration at the Sheraton Universal City.  In 1914 Dad was born into a working class family near New York City.  When he was in high school the Great Depression hit, so he learned to play the French Horn, practicing more than three hours a day, to escape from poverty and earn a decent living.

In a recent video interview with Dad, my son Craig noted that Dad is one of the best brass instrument teachers in the world.  (His book, Essentials of Brass Playing, was published in 1982 and is still sold on Amazon.)

“No!” said Dad.  “I am the best.” 

Very few of my father’s hundreds, or thousands, of students over the past seventy years would dispute that claim.  When the Fred Fox University of Arizona Graduate Wind Quintet rehearsed at his home yesterday I asked Dad if he would please not take over the rehearsal.

“Certainly,” he said.

I arrived forty minutes after they began.  My father, from his chair, had taken over the rehearsal.

“They were all asleep,” he said.  “Now they’re awake.  They’re playing well.” 

Dad always recommends, in no uncertain terms, that everyone pay attention and perform at his or her best all of the time, to squeeze the most out of life.  I suspect that these five outstanding young musicians will tell their tale of yesterday’s lesson with Fred Fox to their friends and students fifty years from now.

One student from 1952 spoke at the party and said, “I had one lesson with Fred.  It changed my life.” 

Another student, who is still enjoying a long and successful career, flew in all the way from New Zealand to attend the party and participate in a short concert for Dad.

A third student, who retired twenty-three years ago after playing with a major symphony orchestra “took his lips out of mothballs” to perform today.

I always look for lessons in each experience, to improve my own life and to share with others. Lessons from today?

  1. Keep your mind active.  Each time I visit Dad he is happy to impart his views on everything.  After the party ended I overheard Dad giving a short French Horn lesson to one of the guests.
  2. Do your very best.  Always.  In my family this notion is seldom mentioned, just assumed.
  3. Keep moving forward.  Dad told me a few years ago that he had figured out a new French Horn technique by listening to a CD of an Austrian French Horn player.  “I wish I had known that when I was playing,” he said.
  4. Tame your negative emotions.  On Saturday Dad drove for an hour and a half to find a hotel to see his ninety-six year old sister.  The hotel was difficult to find, so he returned home—as fresh and happy as when he started.
  5. Be Feisty.  When he was ninety-five Dad underwent open heart surgery.  He was out of intensive care three or four days before the average sixty-year-old.  At the heart rehab facility one week later, compelled to use a walker, Dad strolled the corridors holding the walker high above his head. They sent him home early.
  6. It pays to have good genes.  I asked my dad to mark March 5, 2040 on his calendar because I expected him to attend my own 100th birthday on that date.

My personal philosophy, which permeates everything I write, is this:  We only have today.  It’s up to each of us to make the most of it.

Thanks, Dad.

Alan

 

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