Rinny’s Sheets

Ruthanne w/me on her lap, Bobby in the back,
Joanne and Connie

My sister Ruthanne died on New Year’s Day 2012. She fought a short, vicious battle against the bully cancer. Like much of her life, the process was meticulously planned and carried out: Inform siblings. Inform close family & friends. Inform the world. Pack your shit. Close the factory. Turn out the lights.

I’d add “put your affairs in order” but Ruthanne had probably put her affairs in order before she moved out of our house in 1967. In the midst of a bitter battle of wills with my father, Rin moved down the street to the spare room in Gram and Gramp’s house. Like my cousin Jack before her, but he’d only moved downstairs.

But maybe Rinny didn’t have her shit together back in ’67. Unbeknownst to me, she was already in the grips of addiction. Dad was in the grips too, but  his condition was very beknownst.

I don’t remember any of their arguments, or either of them speaking badly of the other. Did they know what it would’ve done to the 5-year-old me, if one of them had badmouthed the other in front of me, and shield me from that? A nice thought, but I doubt it. When two messed up people have each other in their respective tractor beams, “care and concern for those around you” is not generally a consideration. More likely is my 5-year-old brain was breaking in its denial capability, so I don’t remember events like Dad burning Rin’s clothes out in the yard. All I knew was two of the people I most loved in the world didn’t love each other.

I was very happy when they reconciled. I remember a visit to Ruthanne’s apartment on Charles Street in Boston. Dad came with us, and my recollection is it was a big deal, a turning point in their relationship. That could be selective memory on my part. I remember clearly finding Rinny’s stash in a compartment in her Chinese Palace Dollhouse, but that’s a story for another day.

Sometime around late spring of 2011 Connie and Rin wanted to “talk to me about something.”  I had relapsed in the months before, after almost 10 years clean, but was pretty sure I was maintaining appearances. Did they know? Was this an attempted intervention? Hmm. I got myself in the right frame of mind (“Try not to be a prick, they love you.”) and went to face the music.         

“So…what’s up?”

“I’m sick Paul.”

God forgive me I almost Forrest Gump’d her. “You got cough due t’ cold?” My questions led to the realization that this process hadn’t just started. Diagnosis: confirmed. Prognosis: terminal.  Rin could go through some hellacious treatments, maybe live a little longer, but more than likely the bastard would come back and kill her anyway. She’d decided to forego treatment and make the best of whatever time she had left.

Ruthanne would die the way she’d lived: her way.

Rin was going to move in with our sister, Connie, and Connie’s husband Brian. As she was packing her apartment she set aside items she wanted certain people to have. One of the first times the situation hit home for me was when I went over to help her with something and her wall of books, a most prized collection, was gone. I can’t imagine what it was like for her to pack them up and give them away. She handed me a package. Inside were sheets and pillowcases she didn’t want to throw away. Matched, pressed, folded, tied meticulously in a clear plastic bag, a perfect rectangular cube.

Morbid? Fucking right. Death can be like that.

At first it wasn’t hard to ignore what was happening (see above, “denial”).  There weren’t any symptoms. Then there were. Then they got worse. Then they got really bad. Then she died.

I left my sister Connie’s house late on New Year’s Eve. We had dosed Rinny up, cried. I told her how proud and lucky I was to have a big sister like her. I went to my buddy Frank’s house. I was telling him how it wasn’t looking too good when Connie called. Rinny was dead.

A little over a year ago (note: written in January 2019) I came back from that relapse. I live in a great apartment, have a huge bedroom, and my good ole queen bed. Thing is, I had no sheets. I spread out a comforter, drag a blanket over my ass and I’m good.

Ruthanne would not approve. One does not sleep upon a comforter. A comforter goes on top of the blanket, which goes over the top sheet tucked snuggly with hospital corners, over, of course, the fitted sheet.

So this morning I finally opened that 7-year-old gift from my sister. Six AM, putting my dead sister’s sheets on my bed, crying like a baby. When I lay my head down on her pillowcase tonight, I’ll sleep like one too.

The GYST Manifesto

What is “GYST” and why a manifesto?

GYST stands for Get Your Sh!t Together. GYST4Life! is about sharing my journey of getting my own stuff* together.

The current leg of this journey started in January 2018. That’s when I started what I call “Recovery III.” GYST4Life! is about sharing with you how I am working through the obstacles, challenges, and wreckage of the past.

My goal is to help you succeed in your GYST journey by sharing my experience.

If you are:

  • In recovery from addiction
  • Healing from depression, anxiety, or other mental health issues
  • Recuperating from an illness or injury
  • Trying to get a handle on your thus-far screwed up life

the experience and information I share here can help.

If you are looking for advice, look elsewhere.

GYST4Life! is about me sharing my experience in successfully addressing some daunting challenges. That’s a nice way of saying, the friggin’ dumpster fire my life was after a 7-year relapse into addiction.

What do you do when you’re life is a physical, mental, spiritual, and financial disaster?

First, stop making things worse. Second, take stock of where you’re at in each of those areas. Third, start walking.

These situations include:

  • Homelessness
  • Unemployability
  • Fifty pounds overweight; diabetic; high cholesterol & blood pressure; an Alien-like hernia protruding from my stomach; leprosy-like psoriasis.
  • No health insurance.
  • Sold my car for cigarette money
  • $75,000 in past due income taxes
  • Depression, anxiety, hopelessness

I will share with you how I worked through all that and more.

Before this chapter of my journey started, I was pretty much a hopeless shell of a human being. I prayed every night to die in my sleep and cried many mornings just for having woken up. Then went out and made everything worse.

I had been in recovery twice before, both times for over 9 years.

Recovery I started in 1987. I was an uneducated, unemployable kid with burns on his thumbs from a freebase pipe. By 1997 I’d put together a successful career in politics and government. I relapsed and wasted 5 years.

Recovery II began in 2002. I built a successful career in real estate. I relapsed in 2011. I lost my real estate license and career, another good job I somehow landed, my house**, and my relationship with my children and their mother. The IRS and Massachusetts Department of Revenue were on my tail.

Not me. Hint: he’s smiling

I ended up bartending in a private club in Stoneham. I spent pretty much every waking moment there for 5 years.

I hung with a bunch of great guys who have a couple of beers, rag the crap out of each other and for the most part maintain a life.

I’m not a couple-of-beers-and-a-bone type of guy. If I partake of any kind of mind- or mood-altering substance, I will eventually screw up my whole life.

As long as the money was right at the end of the night, I could drink while I worked. I took all the shifts I could get. My boss once asked me, “How come when you finish a shift, it feels like you should pay me?” I spent most days on one side of that bar or the other.

My life revolved around hopefully making $120 on a shift. I could pay the $40 I owed, buy another one, and then, of course, another one.

At some point in 2017 I got the auction notice for my house. I packed some clothes in a trash bag and left a lifetime of family stuff behind. I ended up living with two good friends who let me crash at their place.

I found out later they call this “couch homeless.” Not under the bridge yet but heading that way.

I’d buy some food for the house with food stamps and felt like a real leech. (That is not a knock on food stamps or those who need them. If you need food stamps, get them, and keep yourself alive until you can buy your own food again. You will find how to do this here.)

I thought a lot about suicide, for the first time at the “how-to” stage. I don’t know if I was being dramatic, but it felt real to me when I decided on carbon monoxide. I picked a parking spot in the lot behind that club, next to the old 7-Day Adventist Bloodmobile. It was private enough to get the job done but someone would find me within a couple days. (Hm, Mel’s been sitting there a couple days, think we should check on him?”)

Thanks to a random text message (S.”C”.K.) and the Florence Nightingale of Boston recovery (A.M.), I got another chance at redemption

I washed ashore in February 2018. I crawled back onto the beach of life, feeling like Andy Dufresne. I got up and looked around, and all my problems surrounded me. For the first time in a long time, I didn’t jump back in the water.

How did I go from trying to figure out how to attach a hose to an exhaust pipe to looking forward to waking up every day? Knowing all I have to do is a few simple tasks to stay on track to a beautiful life?

More importantly: how can you start your journey from wherever you are, to wherever you want to go?

If I answered that you’d have no reason to come back and consume my content. There is no single answer anyway. It’s a process, and I’m good at it. Wherever you are starting from, my content will help.

Want to find out how I reduced that $75,000 tax debt by over $60,000 (with no ‘professional’ help)?

How I won a disability claim against the Social Security Administration (with no “professional” help)?

How I accessed funds to start a new (and lucrative) career in digital marketing?

How I got biologically younger over the last 30 months?

I will be sharing the experience gained from those accomplishments right here. If you or someone you know might benefit from that experience, subscribe here and you’ll be in the loop.

I’ll also be sharing my journey back into recovery. If you, a friend, or family member can use that information, let me know.

The point is to get off your ass and start making progress. For a long time I was constantly looking back with regret. If that sounds familiar, don’t look back ten years from now with regret on another decade wasted. Subscribe and I can help.

I’m good at breaking down complicated projects to manageable increments. That’s what I want to share with you, so you can learn from my experience and do it for yourself.

That’s the gist of GYST.

As for the “manifesto” part: I got that from Gary Vaynerchuk, someone who’s content you should consume daily.

When I was living in the Lowell House Men’s Recovery Home in Tewksbury, I stumbled upon his clip “6 Minutes for the Next 60 Years of Your Life.”

This clip is why this site exists.

One of Gary’s concepts is to tell people what you want to do, then document the doing.

The telling is your manifesto.

This is mine.

* It’s a good name, trying to be considerate.
** Actually, I only thought I lost my house. I’ll document that story in another post!

Photo by Gerd Altmann from Pexels
Photo by ELEVATE from Pexels
Photo by Tim Gouw from Pexels

Dad

It wasn’t until we were waiting for my father to die that my mother told me the story of how they came to be married.

They had seen each other socially a few times when Harry went to pick up Claire where she was living with my four future siblings. It was basically a one-room cabin on Spring Lane in Stoneham. My old friend Michael Mucci lives there now, by himself, and probably finds it cramped.

The roof leaked, and the heat was sporadic. There was ice on the floor. My father looked around and said, “We have to get married, I gotta get you people out of here.”

Not the most romantic of proposals. Then again, maybe it was. You need to know, this was a man who once signed an anniversary card, “Love, Harry Melkonian.”

Shortly thereafter my Dad, a 30-year old sheltered mamma’s boy who still lived in the home of his birth, bought a house and moved in with 5 strangers (four of whom were female).

Dad had a stroke in May of ’98. When they started talking about amputations, Mom and I decided to stop his dialysis and let him go. My man-about-town Dad wasn’t going to end up in the remains of a speechless body being fed apple sauce by strangers.

As he lay dying, staring off into who-knows-what, I told Dad how proud I was to be his son. I like to think he heard me.

Father’s Day June 16, 2019

Mom

My mother was a wonderful woman. My chosen memories are of feeling loved and cherished. Comforted. Of skinned knees lovingly bandaged (with 5-year old me pissed off because she’d say she was sorry. “You didn’t do it!”)

I don’t remember her ever hitting me, but the threat of “a lickin'” was always in the air.

Her laugh. An occasional whiskey sour. Her laugh, her laugh, her beauty queen smile.

My poor mother was surrounded by addicts. Her father; two husbands; both first born. But she died holding dear to her quiet faith in Jehovah.

Sorry for the blaspheme Mom, and all due respect to the Son of Man, but when I need spiritual guidance, WWMD always works for me.

I miss you.

Mother’s Day  May 12, 2019