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Hilary With One L

Hilary With One L

Hilary With One L

Hilary

You’re Super

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I’ve always loved comic books, so it’s no wonder that I picked up a book from the library about a group of college students who wake up with superpowers one day.  What kid hasn’t dreamt of being able to fly, having super strength or speed, or turning invisible? The book is promising thus far.  These young people are grappling with what, if any, responsibility they have to themselves and others as they learn to manage these newfound abilities.  Very Peter Parker-esque.

When it comes down to it, I’m torn between being an average person who takes up the super-hero mantle (Wonder Woman/Batman) or being someone who was born with extraordinary abilities (X-Men/Superman).  Ultimately, it’s too hard to pick just one power to have and I noticed that some of the coolest supers have a little combo pack going on. Look at Superman; he can fly, he’s got X-Ray vision, he’s bullet-proof and so forth.  Storm can control the weather and fly. Iron Man can fly and is basically a superhero Swiss Army Knife with all of his weaponry.  It’s like your entry level superpower is flight and then you can get some ad- ons or something.

If comes down to one thing, while flight sounds nice, I’d rather have something else, like teleportation skills or control of one (or all four) of the elements.  Decisions, decisions.

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IN: ON: April 15, 2011 TAGS: random BY: Hilary
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In Memoriam

Do not stand at my grave and weep;
I am not there. I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow.
I am the diamond glints on snow.
I am the sunlight on ripened grain.
I am the gentle autumn rain.
When you awaken in the morning’s hush
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry;
I am not there. I did not die.
–Mary Elizabeth Frye

April 11th, 211. Today is your birthday, Gram. You would have been 93, I think. I miss you so and I feel tears stinging my eyes as I write this. I won’t delete your number from my speed dial although it has been over five years since you last answered at that number. I miss your voice when I would call you on the phone, the way you would say, “Hey, doll!” and always have time to talk to me. I miss the way you would chastise me for writing you thank you notes for simple things like birthday cards. I miss the way your home smelled of you, of Red Door. The way you would offer me anything and everything in your pantry, your fridge, your cupboards, even if I walked in bearing food.

Mom gave me a recipe box filled with some of your favorite recipes clipped from newspapers or written in your own hand (hello, fudge!). My eyes devoured them greedily. My nose inhaled the scent in that little tin box, so faint and yet so powerful and I was instantly 5 years old, wrapped in your arms, being pulled out of the tub and stood upon the toilet seat while you rubbed me dry with a towel before sprinkling me with Jean Nate and dusting me with a big powder pouf. 

This is how I will teach Morgan and Coever about you. I will give them these memories. I will show them your picture and I will tell them how much you loved them, even though you had only met Morgan once and Coever, not at all, because I know that for as much as you loved me, you didn’t have to know them to love them. You always loved them.

I miss you so much and I want to talk to you and tell you what has been going on. I want to tell you what the girls are up to. I want to hear you laugh when I tell you how Morgan wheedled me down into letting her watch “one show, but that’s it” and how Coever ends every sentence she utters with, “you know”.  I want you to tell me how you told Helen and Aunt Saville that you’ve got to get out to get new frames to put up the pictures of the girls that we just sent to you. I want you to ask me, “How is that broken down brother of yours?” and I’ll gladly respond, “Broken-down.” I want you tell me to give Craig a “big ol’ sloppy kiss”. I want you to tell me to come on over any time when we next come up for a visit. I want to bring you that egg foo young you like so much and try to foist off on me after eating just a taste.

You’ve celebrated 5 birthdays since you’ve gone; I haven’t come to visit, I doubt I even had a moment of silence. I hope you understand the feelings are still tender and raw. I’m stronger now and there are things that I want to do. I will hang Degas’ Ballerinas in the girls room. I will learn to make your fudge; commit it to memory even. 

I had willed myself not to cry at your memorial service. I don’t know why; my reluctance to grieve has only made it that much more powerful when I have given myself that chance. I saved Frye’s poem from the program, though. I like to think this was your way of reminding me of the years of memories we made. I love you, Gram. Happy Birthday.

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IN: ON: April 11, 2011 TAGS: reminiscing BY: Hilary
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Day 27: A Photo of Something You’re Looking Forward To

Driving to Richmond at the crack of dawn. 
Viewing 9 different properties between 10am and 2pm.
Mad dash to the hotel to shower and get glam.
Wedding with my hubs and my sorors.
Drinks and dancing.
4 inch heels and a new pair of Spanx.
More drinks and dancing.
Fast forward to the next day.
Brunch.
More house hunting.
Driving home.
Back into the fray of reality. 
Point me in the direction of the Tempur-Pedic and some 1000 Thread Count Sheets.

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IN: ON: April 10, 2011 TAGS: 30 day, photos BY: Hilary
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Day 26: A Photo of Your Favorite Subject in School

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Looking at my transcript from college, there are a considerable number of English classes listed.  Aside from the core requisites, though, I gladly skipped over the courses on syntax, direct objects and dangling participles.  I gave the two fingers to the Classics, the Romantics, and their ilk (if I never read the Brönte Sisters, I think I’ll be okay).  Creative writing and poetry classes, tucked atop the high floors of Tucker Hall: that’s where I was. That’s where I wanted to be.
I had task masters for professors — Dr. Braxton, Nancy Schoenberger, Professor Cowan — who demanded that I turn myself inside out and upside down to suss out the marrow of words I had to say.  Anything less than that wasn’t worth reading.  
Despite my buckling under the pressure of another professor to take a W when my future in biology looked bleak, I did not dip my chin when Professor Braxton told me that I needed a refund from my high school because I “simply had no analytical skills” when it came to the type of writing she insisted I produce.  Writing was something I could do, something I had been doing for the better part of my educational career.  I loved it. I love it still.  It sustained me then as it does now. I would not let her take it from me. So I showed her what I was capable of and went on to write my ass off for that class. 
I got her respect.
And I got an A.
I still write, though hardly as prolifically as I once did or as I would like.  Part of me feels like I can’t ease back into it.  I’ve got my toes gripping the edge of that cliff of familiarity, a churning pool of “What if?” frothing below.   I’ve got to pick up my old habits – toting around journals that crumble from overuse, writing on napkins, receipts, the palms of my hands, maybe even the children. 
And speaking of the children, I’d be remiss if I didn’t brag a tad on my dear, sweet Morgan who received the 2010-2011 Writing Achievement Award at school for showing a real passion for writing this school year and for having made excellent progress.  
I could definitely take a lesson from her. 
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IN: ON: April 9, 2011 TAGS: 30 day, honesty, photos BY: Hilary
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Day 24: A Photo of What You Want To Be When You Grow Up

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At the risk of sounding cliché, if I have that, everything else will follow. 

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IN: ON: April 1, 2011 TAGS: 30 day, honesty BY: Hilary
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Day 23: A Photo of Something You Want to Do Someday

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I would love, love, love to travel to Giza and see the great pyramids. Egyptian history and lore have always been appealing to me.  My mother introduced me to Pharaoh Rameses II when I was  child and I was hooked ever since.  Certainly I learned about Tut and Cleopatra, but then I met Nefertiti and Nefertari, Amun and Akhenaten. On my first trip to France, seeing the Egyptian Antiquities at the Louvre was just as breathtaking as seeing the Winged Victory and the Mona Lisa (it always comes back to France, doesn’t it?).  I studied hieroglyphics and could write my name and a few basic words without benefit of a guide. I drew the Eye of Ra on all of my book covers and on the inside of my all of my journals.  Years later, I would have it tattooed onto my back.  

Traveling to Egypt didn’t cross my mind until I was much older.  For all the books I’d read, all of the images I’d created in my mind, not once did I see myself in those scenes.  Travel to Egypt didn’t seem realistic or even possible.  It wasn’t a vacation locale, at least not in the traditional sense.  When spring break rolls around, most people go to Daytona, Miami Beach or the Caribbean. Somehow the reality of my life intersected with my daydreams of Cairo when I was in college.  My junior year, an opportunity presented itself in the form of Fulbright Scholarship Applications.   I had applied to study journalism at the University of Cairo for a semester.  I toiled over that application, securing letters of recommendation, transcripts, and amassing a writing portfolio that was borne out of a desire to see the sun sink with a sigh behind desert sands.  I mailed that package, thick with my words and my future and I waited.  I was accepted into the program.  I didn’t get the scholarship.  My parents, though well intentioned, didn’t think it was the best move to send their very American daughter to a very Muslim country all by her lonesome.  No funds. No program. No trip.

I wonder how my life would have been different if I had had that experience.  There are many layers to that onion, for sure.  The educational piece, the career piece, the relationship piece and the self-introspection piece.  Maybe I’d be a multi-lingual international journalist reporting for CNN, sharing desk space and prime time with Anderson Cooper  (hmmmmm). Maybe I’d be an American ex-pat living abroad, smoking cigarettes, writing really bad poetry and living in hostels (that is SO unlikely; if it doesn’t come with a key card and room service, I’m not interested).  Maybe I’d be single, living at home with my parents because after my trip to Egypt, I decided to join the Peace Corps and live a life of volunteerism (again, highly doubtful. Have you met my father? “Free ride” isn’t in his vocabulary).

Of course, on the flip side, had I gone, I wouldn’t have had the benefit of the experience that make me who I am now.  And again, I stop mourning who I was and embrace who I am.

Although, it wouldn’t hurt to step back from that embrace with a packed suitcase, some plane tickets and an idling car on the curb.

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IN: ON: April 1, 2011 TAGS: 30 day, travel BY: Hilary
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Day 21: A Photo of Someone You Find Attractive

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In an effort to be fair to DH and my male celeb crushes (I’ll name names later), I’m taking the road less traveled and posting a pic of my girl crush.  Maybe it’s because I’ve rediscovered her on YouTube. Maybe it’s because she and I are nothing alike, I’m attracted to that kind of crazy unknown. I know she’s all kinds of crack-tastic, emaciated and prone to fight clubs, but I so dig her voice.  The bee-hive, the winged eyeliner, the gap in her teeth like a slightly parted curtain.  It’s all part of the appeal.

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IN: ON: March 28, 2011 TAGS: 30 day, photos BY: Hilary
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Hilary With One L

© 2015 Hilary Grant Dixon.