Tuesday, November 24, 2020

65 Years Ago Today - Happy Anniversary, Mom and Dad!


Sacred Heart: 1955 on top, 2018 on bottom.

At 11:30 this morning, Mom called my uncle. He was big brother to my late Dad (also named Bob), and he’s been a priest since June 1955.

“Do you know what you were doing exactly 65 years ago?” Mom asked.

Before my uncle could respond to the trick question, she answered: “I was walking down the aisle at the cathedral, and you were about to marry Bob and me!”

I visited Mom just as she got off the phone, and she was so exited to tell me again about her wedding, 65 years ago on Thanksgiving, this very day.

In September 1955, Dad had returned from Navy duty overseas, stationed in San Diego. He and Mom had wanted to wait until his brother was ordained before announcing their engagement, which they did when Dad returned to New Jersey to work at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in October. Then, wasting no time, they married in November.

Sacred Heart framed by cherry blossoms, 2019.

Mom wanted everything to be perfect. The night before her wedding, she prayed a rosary and placed the beads on a windowsill in her bedroom. She had heard this would guarantee good luck and good weather. It turned out to be a windy day — not perfect weather — but otherwise Mom considered herself perfectly lucky.

My uncle’s friend was choir director at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Newark, so he arranged the venue: the main altar at what is still the most beautiful, majestic church in the state. They needed two red carpets to cover the distance down the long center aisle. Mom’s immigrant Polish parents had never been in a limo before and had never seen the cathedral before, and it seemed their daughter was living an American fairy tale.

65 years ago today, at the Clifton Casino.

After the ceremony and reception (at Clifton Casino, which no longer exists), Mom and Dad returned to their newly rented, unfurnished second-floor apartment in a house on Kipp Avenue in what was then East Paterson (now Elmwood Park). They sat on the floor and gathered their gift money, and decided to buy a rug and furniture later that week in Passaic.

They never went on a honeymoon. Dad died a month before their 50th wedding anniversary. Life goes on.

Earlier this morning, Mom was calling other senior citizens around her hometown to wish them a Happy Thanksgiving, in case they were lonely.

Mom’s not lonely. Her memories bring her joy, and she dreams about Dad all the time.

They married exactly 65 years ago today, and the groom would be glad to know his bride is living happily ever after.

Mom showed me the Kipp Avenue house in 2019;
right, us today.

Monday, November 23, 2020

My Virtual Life, 2020

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

My Life on Instagram: November 2020, So Far

Nov. 16 - Lunchtime walk in New York City.
The Rockefeller Center tree arrival; Saks 5th Ave. windows.

My life in Instagram posts:

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Nov. 5 - I wrote a poem.



And took a COVID-19 test (results: negative).



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Nov. 6 - I recalled the light I saw at the end of the tunnel.

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Nov. 8 - I saw a breathtaking statue along the Hudson River in Piermont.

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Nov. 10 - I visited Mom in Totowa.

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Nov. 11 - I took a walk across the Tappan Zee Bridge.

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Nov. 14 - I took a walk around my hometown.

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Nov. 18 - I participated in a virtual wine-tasting. Via Zoom. Very 2020.

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So you see, Bob, you have lived a wonderful life.


Friday, November 6, 2020

Cue the Violins: Lessons From a Life Well-Lived

Arthur Samuels (1926-2020)
Arthur Leon Samuels of Tenafly, NJ, would have been 94 this week.

To me, he is forever ageless.

Arthur died peacefully in the arms of Harriet, his loving wife of 55 years, just three months ago.

In my memories of him, I've discovered lessons that are more relevant in my life today than when he first tried to teach me how to play the violin.

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I met Art (I called him "Art" -- which is very meta -- although I now realize he was "Arthur" to his family) on a hot August day in 2007.

I had replied to an ad placed by a luthier in the Twin-Boro News. A man with an older, slightly accented voice called back immediately to ask if I wanted to stop by for an estimate. He gave me an address, but instead of providing directions, he said, "You have a GPS, right?"

Arriving at a suburban home, I knocked on the door with my grandmother's violin case in hand. I had rescued the violin from a potential garage sale, and I was looking for someone to restore it.

Art had kind eyes. He politely directed me inside a house decorated with religious artifacts. "I'll look at the violin," he said, "but you must know that an instrument is meant to be played. I will only restore it, if you promise it will be played."

He also mentioned that he happened to give beginning violin lessons. He asked to see the fingernails on my left hand. "Too long," he commented, as if I had already disappointed him, then asked that I accompany him to his basement.

I did, contrary to everything I had learned from watching horror movies. We walked through "Bubbie's Kitchen" (as a wall sign proclaimed) and down a steep, narrow staircase. It opened to a room filled with old violins, violin parts, books about restoration, and a workbench. The clutter and the smell of aged wood reminded me of my grandfather's workshop.

Art put on thick reading glasses and examined the violin. He commented on every aspect of its construction and what work it would need. He pronounced it a good violin; it deserved to be played.

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I agreed to the violin lessons, of course. Over the next three years, I learned much about Art (both upper and lower case). And now, out of respect, I will forevermore call my friend Arthur. 

Here's an excerpt from his obituary:
Drafted into the United States Army in his senior year of high school during World War II, Arthur served in the 3rd Army, 15th Corp. As a musician in the Special Services division, he performed with USO shows throughout Europe. [A graduate of Julliard], Arthur taught music in the NYC Public School System for over 20 years, becoming... a highly sought after private instructor in violin. In addition, Arthur was the Concertmaster of the North Jersey Symphony Orchestra.
A multifaceted person; he published several short stories, enjoyed metal detecting, riding his motorcycle, photography, building model trains and airplanes... He was also a member of the Tenafly Rifle & Pistol Club.

Arthur's first lesson: The best people will surprise you.

For all the time I spent with Arthur, and for all the stories he told me, absolutely everything in the above second paragraph was unknown to me until I read his obituary. 

I didn't know that he wrote (like me) or rode a motorcycle (unlike me). Or that he enjoyed building models (like young me) and photography (like older me). Or (and this would have been great to have known when I first followed him to his basement) that he liked guns.

Violin
My grandmother's violin
Before I read his obituary, I honestly thought I knew everything about his life. It turns out I probably know a bit about his life as a professional musician and his theories of music and love of the violin. But I didn't really know Arthur.

He was complicated. Aren't we all more complicated than other people think?

Repeat after me: "Underestimate me. That'll be fun."

Do we ever really know or appreciate the people we love? The first lesson of Arthur Samuel (and, spoiler alert, it's related to the last lesson) is that our lives would be better, and more interesting, if we tried.

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Arthur's second lesson: Strive for, and appreciate, excellence.

I've taken many hours to write this post because of all the things I've left out: all the details about violins, and great violinists (many of whom Arthur knew and played beside), and music in general and classical music in particular.

I kept a diary during the time I took lessons, but I'd need thousands of words to recount those stories here.

So let me -- like music, like poetry -- try to compress things.

Imagine it's before sunrise on Saturday morning. You are home, practicing a violin in a downstairs bathroom with high ceilings and excellent acoustics. Behind a closed door, you aren't disturbing the rest of your family.

You struggle, but the music doesn't come.

Violinists can play a simple "C" note a thousand different ways, depending on finger placement and pressure and bow movement. All the ways you play a "C" sound awful.

Then you pack your grandmother's restored old violin in the new case that you bought (because your teacher said that other musicians will judge you on your case... it's one of those unwritten rules, reminiscent of when dads explain the secret etiquette of golf). And you drive to a suburban home in a neighboring town and ring the doorbell that is the wake-up call for your violin teacher.

Arthur Samuels, now in his 80s, shuffles to answer the door and leads you to his studio. He smells like sleep. He absently reaches for his violin.

Loud and clear, you hear the "C" you were trying to replicate. It's followed by note after note after note in quick succession, and each tone is graceful and effortless and evocative.

It's Arthur, playing a simple warmup exercise. You get goosebumps.

Malcolm Gladwell will tell you that what Arthur just did resulted from a lifetime of experience and at least 10,000 hours of appropriate, guided practice.

I will tell you, it's magic.

Hard as I tried, I could never replicate that magic. Still, the hours I spent with Arthur taught me to appreciate the violin, and this has been a blessing to me and has extended to other areas of my life.

Midway through my second year of lessons, both Arthur and I realistically concluded that I was a horrible violinist. I am impatient; I have no sense of rhythm and, most damning of all, my middle-aged fingers and wrist movements physically could not produce even an approximation of what Arthur could literally play in his sleep.

But Arthur would tell me stories about the great violinists. Stories about his own career. He played tapes and records for me. What Arthur lacked in computer literacy, he made up for in curiosity, so I taught him how to find and download YouTube videos. I'd project violin performances to his TV and we'd listen and watch them together. He'd critique each one, except for performances by Jascha Heifetz, which were always flawless.

My old violin case

I learned to love the violin.

I remember trying to hold back tears during a recital I dragged my wife to in Teaneck, NJ. A twig-armed young violinist tuned up by playing pitch-perfect phrases from Vivaldi at a very fast speed. Her bow bounced from one non-adjacent string to another with the faintest flutter of her slender forearm, with seemingly as much effort and interest as if she were flicking a butterfly from her shoulder.

My corollary to Arthur's second lesson: Sometimes, when I am at my very best as a writer, I hear his encouraging voice in my head.

This mitzvah is a constant reminder to be confident and ever-curious as a writer. Many years after he stopped giving me "violin lessons" and to this very day, Arthur still encourages the belief that I can transcend my own mediocrity, even as the limits of my abilities and my accomplishments come more into focus with the passing of time.

Arthur tells me that when I write, I can do anything.

My words can keep pace with the young violinist in Teaneck. They can be just as fancy as her grace notes. I can provide the countermelody and add perspective to her careless perfection.

All this, and I'm just warming up.

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Arthur's third lesson: Everything is secondary to love.

This past Monday night during the Giants' game, a Caller ID message flashed across my TV screen. It read "SAMUELS, ARTHUR" followed by his telephone number.

I looked at my wife and waived my hands skyward in surrender. "I can't believe these spam callers," I said. "This has to be a spoof."

But curiosity got the best of me, so I answered the phone, anyway.

It was Harriet, Arthur's wife.

I had made a donation in his name to a local community center after reading his obituary. Harriet was calling to thank me.

She said she was writing thank-you cards, but she couldn't recall who I was.

I explained that we had met only once or twice for a moment at her house, but that I was one of Arthur's last violin students.

"Oh, you're that Bob," she said. "I thought it might be. Of course, I remember you!"

We talked for several minutes about Arthur. Harriet spoke with warmth and affection. She also informed me I was not quite his last student. Arthur had even given a violin lesson to his granddaughter from his hospital bed just days before he died after complications from a fall.

Harriet said, "Of course, since the spring, we quarantined together in our house. You know what? COVID brought us closer. I've never been more in love with Arthur than the last few months we had together."

This, too, gave me goosebumps.

Arthur and Harriet Samuels were married 55 years before his death three months ago. In the end, they grew more in love every day.

Nothing else matters.

Thursday, November 5, 2020

More Adventures in Photojournaling

Last night, in photojournaling class, we were asked to imagine a photo and write about it. I accidentally wrote a poem:

Source: www.galeriacanvas.pl (public domain)

My Last Words to Vincent

In a cornfield in the middle of a dream,

I recognize the countryside.

This must be Arles.


I’ve never been to France in real life,

but I know what I know.

Cue the murder of crows.


In the distance, a man reimagines the scene on canvas.

It's a matter of hours before he shoots himself

and takes three days to die.


He works as if possessed.

I want to run to him, tell him his work will endure,

but the crows won't let me near.


I shout, "It isn't too late!"

He turns his head; I take his photo.

It captures the long view of both of us:


Imaginary proof of all our useless dreams.


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You can view other modest adventures in photojounaling here and here. Or just follow me on Instagram at @bvarphotos, where sometimes I just write long captions. Life it too short; I always follow back.

Sunday, November 1, 2020

NY Images / Pre-Election Pandemic / Captions in Haiku

All photos by me.

My poetry may be bad,

but I blame the news.*

Times Square
Greetings from Ghost Town.
Times Square on a weekday night.
Crossroads of Covid.

St. Patrick's Cathedral
Church and State at dusk.
All await, with a prayer,
the dawn's early light.

Radio City
Radio City.
Anarchist Jurisdiction,
in living color.

St. Bart's Church
The children of God
seek marble sanctuary,
find cardboard refuge.

Steam on East 43rd Street
East 43rd Street,
relentlessly blowing steam,
stirs man's shuffling pace.

Grand Central Terminal
Suspended in March,
Grand Central in October,
returning to life.

Fruitstand
Venmo accepted.
The city re-forms. Because
true greatness is rare.

NYC skyline
Skyline at sunset.
As far as my eyes can see,
light blesses these souls.

Trump Tower
Vanishing tower.
The only place in New York,
surrounded by ghosts.

*- With apologies to Lana Del Rey.


Photos taken in October 2020. Follow me on Instagram.

Saturday, October 31, 2020

A Dozen Images of Haunted New Jersey

Abandoned asylum
This place no longer exists.

It's Halloween 2020, and as if things aren't scary enough, I'm haunted by a review of some photos from past posts.

In New Jersey, you can't take photos anywhere without a ghost looking over your shoulder. Here's what I mean:

Clinton Road (West Milford)

Clinton Road is the setting of a 2019 movie about the nearly 10-mile stretch of road that cuts through a thick forest in former iron-mining country. Ghost stories abound, and you've no doubt heard a few yourself if you grew up in the Garden State. As a character states in the movie's trailer, "Everyone knows that place is haunted!"

This story in The Record, including the photo here by Michael V. Pettigano (other photos on this page are mine), does a great job in detailing the backstory. As David M. Zimmer writes:

"Tales involve a ghost boy who throws back coins dropped over a small bridge, a phantom car that appears at the rear bumper of nighttime visitors with lights blaring, and a satanic cult that gathers at odd stone structures in the woods."

Devil's Tower (Alpine)

The Devil's Tower is located at the end of tony Esplanade Road. Manuel Rionda, a U.S.-based sugar baron in Cuba, built it in 1910 for his wife, Harriet Clarke, so that she view New York City in the distance.

Legend has it, she was enjoying that view one evening in 1922 when she saw Manuel kissing another woman. Overcome with anger and rage, Harriet leapt from the tower to her death.

As every schoolgirl at nearby Academy of the Holy Angels (both my daughters are graduates) will tell you, if you drive or walk backward around the tower three times, you see the ghost of Manuel's wife. Another version of the legend states that, visiting there, you might also find yourself face-to-face with the actual Devil.


Devil's Tree (Bernards)

Here's what Weird New Jersey has to say:

"This is one sinister looking tree, and according to the locals, who told us of its legends, everyone in the vicinity of Bernards Township seems to have a story about it.  They say that at one time a farmer killed his entire family, then went to the tree to hang himself. According to some, numerous suicides and murders occurred around the evil arbor. Supposedly anyone who tries to cut down the tree comes to an untimely end, as it is now cursed. It is said that the souls of those killed at the spot give the tree an unnatural warmth, and even in the dead of winter no snow will fall around it.

"We noticed evidence that many attempts had been made over the years to fell the unholy oak, but all have failed. The tree stands all alone in the middle of a large field off Mountain Road. Its trunk has been severely scared by axes and chain saws, some wounds appearing to be quite old. Why no one has yet been successful in toppling the timber we cannot say for sure. Nor do we know what has become of those who have tried."

Bernardsville Library

Not far from the Devil's Tree is the old (and former) library in Bernardsville. It used to be the Vealtown Tavern, built in the 1700s.

Phyllis Parker, the tavern owner's daughter, has been rumored to haunt this building ever since. Librarians claimed to have seen her or heard her crying so many times, they issued her a library card.

The historic marker, which looks like a tombstone, states, "By this route, Washington with his army retired to Morristown after his victory at Princeton, January 1777 -- erected by the DAR."

Hermitage Museum (Ho-Ho-Kus)

Built in the 1840s in Gothic Revival style, this site is Bergen County’s first National Historic Landmark. Guests of the original estate included a who's who of Revolutionary War heroes, and Aaron Burr was married there.

According to a story in The Record, tour guide Craig McManus reports that lights and motion detectors have gone on unprovoked, and a woman has been seen in the upstairs window. "We think there are about four or five spirits in the house," he said. "The house itself is kind of a paranormal hot spot."

The Hermitage has been known as a ghost house since at least 1917, when Bess Rosencrantz and her niece opened a popular tea room there. The tea room operated for about 15 years. Its haunted tales made newspaper headlines as far as North Dakota.

Easton Tower (Fair Lawn)

Here's what Hauntedplaces.org has to say:

"Easton Tower is a stone and wood frame structure, once an irrigation pump, built in 1900 as part of a scenic park. It now abuts the Saddle River Bikeway. It was named after Edward D. Easton (1856-1915), founder and president of the Columbia Phonograph Company. It is sometimes mistakenly called the Red Mill because in the early 1800s a mill nearby was painted red, and many mistook it for the Easton Tower.

"Residents who live near the tower say strange noises come from the building at night, and at least one witness saw a white apparition at the window."

Red Mill (Clinton)

This is a photo of the Hunterdon Art Museum, across Clinton Falls from when I stood at iconic Red Mill. You don't need to see another photo of that! As Only In Your State explains:

"Clinton's famous Red Mill is often hailed as the most photographed building in New Jersey. While there's no way to track that data, it has been featured in numerous films, calendars and advertising campaigns. Today, it's a charming museum and popular wedding venue… but it has quite a dark past.

"[Some] say the spirit of a young girl whose father worked at the mill often comes to visit. A verified tale involves the tenant house on the property -- documentation shows a death by heart attack. Guests have reported hearing footsteps in vacant areas of the tenant house, objects moving with no clear cause throughout the property and even seeing a man on the third floor of the mill. Many have mentioned the authentic period re-enactor on the third floor -- but the mill does not employ period re-enactors."

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Finally, here are three haunted places from in and around the town where I grew up. This isn't counting the abandoned asylum (photo at the top of this post), which has since been completely leveled and is now a construction site. Never mind. I have no doubt it will soon be an addition to my list of haunted places.

Dey Mansion (Totowa Road, Wayne)

Every time I've visited here recently after stopping by Mom's house, the place has been closed. Blame the pandemic. Or maybe it isn't closed and it's filled with visitors, and I'm one of the ghosts haunting the site!

Here's what the Try to Scare Me site has to say: "Built in the early 1700's by Dirck Dey, the Dey Mansion (pronounced Die)... served as headquarters for Washington twice. [He] returned to the mansion after learning that Benedict Arnold betrayed the Americans. It was said that Washington battled his own ghosts and internal battles during his stay after this devastating news.

"There are numerous rumors of visions that appear on the road and grounds. Late at night while drivers pass the mansion, they might come across the ghostly apparition of a soldier."

Annie's Road (Totowa)

Annie is the ghost of a teenager, dressed in white, killed by a pickup truck as she tried to find her way to safety along unlit Riverview Drive. She fled her boyfriend's car after an argument on Prom Night.

All the locals call this stretch of Riverview Drive "Annie's Road," and roadside memorials keep her legend alive. A Halloween tradition is to spill red paint on the blacktop and guard rails so that drivers will think they see Annie's blood.

Annie's Road snakes behind a cemetery and bypasses an alcove of small homes called, with no pretense of political correctness, Midgetville.

Laurel Grove Cemetery (Totowa)

There are over 96,000 people buried in Totowa, a borough with a population of only 11,000 living souls. Following the Passaic River north on sharply bending Annie's Road, right past "Dead Man's Curve," is Laurel Grove Cemetery, where Dad is buried.

Reading a paranormal investigator's adventures at the site reveals quite a few "orb photos" (circles of light seen only on film) in images of the mausoleums and at various locations on the cemetery grounds.

In visits here, I'm mostly taken by the assortment of odd and curious gravestones and monuments. You can see one while passing through town on the highway -- a large, majestic elk on a bluff overlooking Route 80. Perhaps the most unique gravestone there belongs to Sal Giardino, the "World's Greatest Electrician."