Saturday, June 1, 2013

Penny

The first time I saw her I knew she would be mine. But this was not in a love at first sight kind of way. It was more of a no-one-will-ever-adopt-this-dog-and-I'm-gonna-be-stuck-with-her-now kind of way.

One of our best clients, Mrs Granas, made the initial phone call to the animal hospital to tell us of this white dog who had run into her yard and was now hiding in the far corner. She couldn't get near it. She asked me if I could send someone to pick it up so it could be brought to the hospital, scanned for a microchip, and its owners called so they could retrieve their pet. Yes, Mrs Granas, no problem, because things are always that easy.

So I saddled one of the techs with the task to somehow get this dog into their car and back to the hospital. Joe pulled the short straw and returned an hour later looking like he'd been to the rodeo and accidentally fell in the bullpen. I peaked through his rear window and that's when I first saw her.

White as a ghost and acting like she'd seen one. Her pink nose was dripping blood and practically scraped off. She was trying so hard not to look at me and at the same time tracking every movement I made. I opened Joe's rear door and slowly reached my leash pole towards her head and lassoed it over her. I gave a gentle tug. She buried her head in the seat. Another gentle tug. She froze completely. Yet another tug....

She lept from the car and hit the ground hard. She was an alligator rolling violently on the pebbled dirt of the employee parking lot. The leash pole quickly began to tighten, unable to keep up with her frantic spinning. I grabbed the heavy blanket from Joe's backseat and desperately tossed it in her direction. To my complete astonishment, she stopped at once. I could see the blanket rising and falling with her frightened breaths.

"You're OK. You're OK. You're a good girl."

Over and over.

I reached my hands down around her and lifted her surprisingly light 40 lbs into my arms and carried her into the treatment room. I held her while the doctor examined her. She might as well have been a statue. Not a muscle was moved. Not a growl nor a snarl. She seemed healthy enough. We set up a cage for her in our isolation ward. She scurried into it and placed herself at the back of the cage and hid her head in the corner. Her bowls were filled and a ID card was attached to her cage. It read "Penny."

Two full days passed. But each time we checked on her, the bowls were untouched, she was unmoved, and her blankets were unsoiled. She would not leave the cage on her own accord. Every time I approached her head with a leash, her eyes would glaze, she would begin panting, and her gums turned pale white. Ultimately, we found that the only way we could get her to urinate was to lift her from her cage, place her on the treatment table, and pass a urinary catheter to empty her bladder.

When I try to explain to people how fearful Penny was when I first met her, I fall short. And it's always met with "Oh yes, my dog was very scared, too." Penny's fear was absolute and unmatched. But Penny's fear also possessed a profound kindness. It was hers and hers alone. She never let it translate into aggression towards anyone ever. Not even in her first and most terrified moments with me. Never once did she even bare her beautiful fangs in my direction.

Penny continued to leave her food bowl full. But she didn't appear to be getting skinny. In truth, she actually appeared to be getting big...ger. Hmm.

The X-ray revealed at least four little spines.

On the morning of January 2, 2009, Penny gave birth to 5 healthy puppies in Run 13 of Beverly Hills Small Animal Hospital.  They were all tiny versions of her which led us to believe that the father must have also been the same kind of dog as Penny. I later learned Penny was a Jindo.

SIDE NOTE: The Jindo is the natural (feral) dog of Jindo Island in South Korea. I read that they are fiercely loyal and brave by nature. I found this to be one of the most bona fide facts I have ever known. What I never did find out was where she spent the first four years of her life. Her unfamiliarity with any civilised artifact and her seemingly novel approach to just about everything, led me to believe that she was part of a feral contingency of white Jindos that have been rumoured to wander the hills above Hollywood. As far fetched as this always sounded, it was quite simply the only explanation that ever made any sense.

I brought Penny and her brood home with me that same night, and from then on, Penny never left me. The months spent whelping and raising her puppies solidified a bond between Penny and me that only hardened with more resolve as our time together passed. She was a slave to them and begrudgingly had to rely on me for her own care. I held bowls of carefully curated meals up to her mouth for her to meekly enjoy. Still unwilling to be leashed or even move freely in the house, she allowed me to carry her to the yard multiple times a day so she could pee. After which I would carry her back into the house. Her fear of me was still very real, but I took every chance I could to touch her impossibly soft coat and tell her the only truth I could. That I would take care of her for as long as she needed me to.

The babes grew famously fast and flew off the shelves once made available for adoption. They were tiny polar bear babies with the sweetest dispositions. What Penny lacked in social skills, they made up for ten-fold. At this point, Penny was up for adoption, too. But it's rather hard to adopt a dog out who runs in the opposite direction if you dare even glance at her.

After 6 months, I realized she would be mine always. At this point she began going outside on her own, as long as no one was standing anywhere near the path she wished to take out of the house. She became a lovely ghost living in our home, going about her business and staying out of sight. Friends knew of her existence only through faith, having never seen her in the flesh. She finally allowed me to  place a collar on her with a big red heart tag signaling her belonging. She very naturally came to love my dogs, Scout and Marshmallow, and they reciprocated easily. Scout finally had the big dog companion she wanted, and Marshie had the partner in crime that Scout was always to well-behaved to be. It literally took a year before she felt safe enough with me to walk on a leash, and another six months before we could walk happily together in crowded places. Throughout her life there were only ever a handful of people that she would allow to walk her. It was an honor not easily earned and rarely achieved.

My belief that she had been a feral dog in the LA  mountains grew stronger as I came to discover her love of running free in the hills near our home. One day while in the park in the Hollywood Hills, without thinking I accidentally unhooked her leash, just like I had the to other dogs with me, and Penny took off. I assumed that was it. I called and called. Nothing. After an hour, she came bolting back into the park and stopped abruptly 10 feet away from me. I approached her at a painfully slow pace, repeating over and over again to stay and that everything was OK. I slowly clipped the leash back into place. I felt flush and was overcome with joy. My eyes welled up and I pet her and told he she was a good girl. And that became our routine, time permitting.

Every time I came home, my dogs would go wild. It was always, and still is, the most gratifying welcome. But Penny invariably stayed hunkered down under the table, watching the action. One day I came home after work, and after getting pounced on by Scout and Marshmallow, I turned to close the door behind me. That's when I felt it. Two paws placed themselves on my lower back. I turned my head and saw Penny standing there staring at me, like she was saying,

"I'm happy you're home. I'm not sure how to show you, but I think it goes something like this."

 I knew if I moved, she'd dash away, so I stood there and let her learn to finally love me back.

Time flew by as it does in your late twenties. All the while Penny became the loyal Jindo she was born to be and I was the one she swore herself to. And as Penny's love for me grew, so did mine for her until it became an untouchable and fierce force. My appreciation for Penny's special way poured out into my family, friends, and coworkers as they began to take a special interest in her, as well. It became a goal for many to gain her trust. The only one who ever really got it was my sister, Mary, but she also blessed my fiance Michael, my brother Angelo, and my friend Jon with her timid love.

Another thing about Penny. When I first saw her, I thought she was kind of ugly. Her face was so clouded with terror and flight that it affected her physical appearance. But Penny truly became on of the most beautiful creatures I have ever known. People (specifically Koreans) would swoon when they saw her. I was even followed through Griffith Park once and offered cash for her.

Last April, I took Scout, Marshie, and Penny to Elysian Park for a hike. Penny had gotten very good about being off leash and staying close by. I was never worried about her running away anymore. She had found a home in me and had no plans of leaving it. Penny ran ahead on the trail and just out of sight. A woman saw her and got the lost-dog-vibe from her and attempted to approach her. Penny's fear, though subdued most of the time at this point, kicked right back into high gear and she ran off the trail. The woman began to chase her, thinking she was doing the right thing. Penny became so frightened, she ran out of Elysian Park. All of this happened within minutes and completely unbeknownst to me.

I did, however, realize that something was amiss when I called and she did not come. She always came when I called. I started to walk back towards the car, so that when she got back on the trail, I wouldn't miss her if she exited the park. I had no idea she had cut down the mountain and ran out of the park on the other side of the hill. I stood by my car for 15 minutes, waiting to see that bright white coat running down the trail towards me. But I never did.

My phone rang and I knew. I knew because no one could ever get close enough to Penny to read my number on her tag. Unless, she was unable to move.

"Your dog's been hit by a car. We're on Alvarado and Kent. She's still alive."

I sped out of Elysian Park and drove 2 miles to where they said she was. It hit me as I turned on Alvarado that she was running home. She was only two blocks away. There was a horrible traffic jam and people standing in the street. As I drove up the median I saw her lying in the middle of the road. I could see her chest rapidly rising and falling. I could see her body tense every time a woman there put per hand down pet her. I could see her fear just like I did the first time we met. I hated to see her in that state again. I hated that I had let her be scared. I jumped out of my car and screamed for them to stop touching her. I called out to her as I ran

"Penny I'm here! Penny I'm here."

She heard my voice and leapt to her feet. She tried to run towards me but collapsed. I knelt down and lifted her into my arms, kissing her and burying my face into her soft fur. I placed her in my hatchback and hugged her. I knew I was losing her. I didn't want her to see or hear how scared I was. I wanted her to know she was safe again. I wanted her to know I was there and I loved her. Scout laid next to her and nervously licked her muzzle. I pressed my face against hers. She sighed.

"You're OK. You're OK. You're a good girl. You are such a good girl."

I shake when I think about if I had arrived just a couple minutes later. I thank God that she died feeling safe and not on the street in a state of fear. All I ever had to offer Penny was this. A safe harbor and my love. And she did not need,  nor want anything more.

Today we took the dogs for a hike at Debs Park. As we were getting out of the car, Michael told me he had seen a small white Jindo on his earlier walk the dogs. We always make a point to share when we've seen one. We walked the corner to the main trailhead and saw a big white Jindo stomping around in the fallen leaves. She came right up to Scout and Marshie to greet them. She was carefree and happy. Her mother stood just ahead proudly watching as her dog bounced around ours making fast friends. Michael and I both reached down to pet her, and she eagerly pushed her head into our hands and her body into our legs to ask for more.

"She's a Jindo, isn't she?"

"That's what people tell me."

"They're special dogs."

We talk a minute about their idiosyncrasies and beautiful flaws, as I continue to pet her and blur my eyes slightly, pretending just for a moment that Penny never left. She licks my hand as I ask what her name is.

"It's Penny."

Penny from melanie bellomo on Vimeo.









Monday, March 19, 2012

Dear Tim




Dear Tim,

I want to thank you for deciding that Nocci was not the dog you wanted for your 10th birthday. At the time, we all thought you were being a brat as you looked at the scruffy white pup perched in Papa Joe's arms and muttered,

"But I wanted a Beagle."


Which you did and had made quite clear for weeks prior. You wanted a Beagle that you could name Bagel. Bagel Bellomo. Papa knew you were right. And to be honest, I think Papa was counting on you saying that. I'll bet Papa saw Nocci and was defenseless against his impossible cuteness, further magnified by the fact that he had kennel cough and would wheeze uncontrollably. You show me a man who can leave behind a scruffy white pup with Bordetella bronchiseptica, and I will show you a man with no heart.

Yes, Tim, I think Papa knew exactly what he was doing, as he shrugged his shoulders, looked at the rejected pup and let out a very calculated sigh,

"I don't think I should bring the poor guy back. He could die, you know. Well... I guess I could keep him."

And with that sweet manipulation, began the longest relationship our family has had with any animal, ever. The era of Nocci.

Years passed by and Nocci never seemed to age. But as you know, the same did not go for Grama Mary and Papa Joe, though. By the time I started working at the animal hospital, I had made a habit of picking Nocci up for little week long visits. But, I always had to beg Papa to let me take him. Once I kept Nocci for two weeks instead of one, without Papa's consent. I don't know if I have ever seen him so upset with me.

"That's my buddy, you know!"

So when Grama had to have heart surgery and Papa said he needed me to take care of Nocci "just for a little while," I knew what that really meant and I knew how difficult it must have been for Papa to accept. He wouldn't have his little buddy riding around town in his Model A with him, or sitting by his side while he worked on whatever old car happened to be in his garage that month. From that moment, I decided that I would take the greatest care of Nocci. I would give him the kind of life that he had earned. He would eat the best foods, sleep in the warmest beds, and go on the longest walks. All of which he did and all of which he relished in.

Just as soon as Grama recovered from her health issues, Papa's began. Being Nocci's keeper meant that I was also responsible for making sure Papa got to visit with him. So for Papa's final year with us, Nocci and I made the trip to Simi Valley twice a week. It is the most special time that I can remember. Some of my most meaningful moments with Grama and Papa happened during these visits. I have to say, though, that everytime we visited I always feared that Papa would say that he wanted me to leave Nocci behind with him. But then, just weeks before Papa died, he was holding Nocci in his lap...

"Melanie, I want you to take care of my Nocci for me. I want you to keep him."

And after Papa was gone, everyday I got to look at this living, breathing reminder of him. I loved watching him become Papa's stand-in at family get-togethers. I think he really loved the way everyone would fawn over him, commenting on how handsome his haircut was or how good he looked for his advanced age. Nocci was finally being acknowledged for what he had always been. An AMAZING DOG.

We've all continued to give you a hard time for turning Nocci down, Tim. Even on Nocci's last day this weekend, Dad once again relayed the whole story, and we all got a good laugh in at your expense. But I hope you know, and I'm gonna tell you right now to be sure that you do, I have been so blessed by that decision you made at 10 years of age.

Tim, I got to take care of Nocci for 7 of his 17 years. I cannot tell you what that means to me. I cannot tell you how much I grew to love him. I cannot tell you what an impact he has made on me or how he has made me a better person. I cannot tell you how grateful I am to have had a piece of my childhood with me in my adulthood.

But what I can tell you is how thankful I am that you wanted a Beagle. Thank you for making it possible for Papa to have a true companion. Thank you for giving me the chance to spend time with Papa before he died that I otherwise may not have. Thank you for giving me Nocci. I loved him so much. I miss him even more so. I cry for him like I have cried for family that have passed. Because he was one of us. He was the best version of us.

Nocci kept us all connected to a very special time in all of our lives. From the good, to the bad, and everything in between, Nocci was there for it all. And we have you to thank for it. Thank you, Tim. From the bottom of my heart.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Pie Hole

Angelo found the best video on the Internet.



Thank you.

Monday, November 14, 2011

I am...

Done. Over.
Resistance was futile.








Thursday, October 6, 2011

Chimney Swifts

Becky told Michael and Michael told me.

Two cyclists and an imposter on an old Dutch to Broadway and 5th just before sunset to watch birds.

Thousands of tiny black birds.

Vaux Swifts. They're little. They're migratory. They're in love with a chimney. On their way to Guatemala, they stop by this abandoned building (and have been for a number of years) to roost, and inadvertently swoon the residents of Los Angeles.

I'm pretty sure there are people writing maudlin verses of poetry right now about these birds and this chimney.

But I get it.

I, myself, could not help but put an emotionally moving orchestral piece on this video.

Chimney Swifts from melanie bellomo on Vimeo.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Super

This kid. I hope she likes me as much as I like her.

Friday, August 26, 2011

BIBA

$10 keyboard from Rite-Aid that played mostly Christmas songs.
Biba fearless, reckless, and shirtless.
Grant and Jon holding down the beat.
Molly and I with the best seats in the house.
A dog in every corner of the yard.

And with that, Biba danced. And I mean, she tore the front porch down, channeling an amazing amalgamation of James Brown, Robyn, and Edgar Winter.


We did this for an hour.



When it was time to stop, Biba cried and cried in futile, childhood protest.

I believe we all cried, too. But only on the inside, as we have learned not to cause a fuss. We have learned that the fun inevitably comes to an end and you have to go to bed.

How do you explain that logic to a kid? You can't, because if you think about it long enough, you find that it makes no sense.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Le Monde Appartient à Ceux Qui Se Lèvent Tôt

I left the room at 5am with my Super 8 in hand to film the Parisian sunrise.

It was really hard to keep up the facade that I meant to dress in sandals and a sleeveless shirt while I walked through Monmartre in the rain. The weather had been perfect the past couple days, and I thought it was dark out, because, well, it was 5am... not because there were rain clouds doing their thing, and doing it well.

The sun wouldn't be rising that day. And that was ok. Because I was in Paris, and if there are two things I love, it's being alone and public transit systems. So a quick change of plans, and a quick look at the map and I was on my [soaking wet] way.

I hopped on and off the Metro a couple of times, and happened across an umbrella along the way.

There was not a soul in sight, save a couple of dedicated joggers and a groundskeeper.

Just me, in the rain, standing beneath the Eiffel Tower, hoping that the rest of the world would sleep in that day.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

4

4 from melanie bellomo on Vimeo.


Spent the kind of day with friends where you find yourself repeating the phrase, "Is this really my life?" Over and over.
Weather too temperate, water too welcoming, food too good, people too cool, life too easy.
Everyone with cameras in hand, it has been called by some the most well-documented 4th of July of 2011.
Bryan & Alli and Ryan & Sonia opened their home and stretch of Malibu beach to us, and had every eastsider second-guessing their coordinates by the end of the day.

Friday, July 29, 2011

An Open Letter to the Universe



Dear Universe,

Your attempts to keep me away from this girl are nothing short of cruel. At first, I brushed it off as simple coincidence. But now, 2 years after seeing this lovely face for the first time, my absolute adoration has not waned, and you continue to mock me.

Coincidence, I think not.

Rather, full blown intent to separate. But for what? For why? I have put some thought into this, because, Universe, you are complicated. However, I believe I have figured it out. You clearly are threatened by the potential power storm of amazing magical explosions that will occur when Jasmine Ash and I rise above your futile efforts and, once and for all, fulfill our destiny to HANG OUT.

Well I have news for you, Universe. You will not keep us apart. We shall overcome. We will be in the same city for more than 3 days and we will meet up for coffee and we will talk about pups and nail polish and bunnies and the Beatles.

So get over it. Because it's happening. And the world will be a better place for it. So get on the goddamned bandwagon already and stop hatin'.

Regards,
Melanie

UPDATE: My browser crashed as I was posting this and everything was LOST! GONE! BYE BYE! That has NEVER happened before and frankly, Universe, I take that as a threat. Bring it, bitch.

Lesson Unlearned





I guess I play the piano. I mean, I think I do.

We grew up with a little Story&Clark in our living room on Oakmont Ct. It started innocently with that song where you roll your fist on the three black keys, then pound the flanking black keys twice as hard you can in between each fist roll... You guys know the one. I would do that nonstop, because it really didn't have an ending. And man, it sounded as good as it felt.

From there it all came pretty quickly: Mary Had a Little Lamb, Heart and Soul, the Top Gun Theme. Pretty soon, my left hand joined in, and I was making up my own pretty little songs. PS:Here's the great thing about not knowing how to write music down... You must never stop playing or you will forget it all. Therefore, I never stopped playing.

Lessons were never even considered. To be completely honest, I didn't even know such a thing existed. The piano bench was the most popular seat in my house, and maybe my parents knew that the last thing we needed after a long day of guilt and redemption at St Rose of Lima Catholic School were rules and regimen. Thankfully, apart from the actual architectural structure of our house, structure was the one thing that was brilliantly lacking in our home.

Papa Joe played piano. Without a doubt. He was a bona fide piano player. One of those never-took-a-lesson-in-his-life types. He would play anything and everything for hours. And purely for enjoyment. His and ours. We would dance wildly around my grandma's living room while he banged out the 12th Street Rag and the Flight of the Bumble Bee, following each note with a corresponding leap, spin ,or crash. Then he would kindly slow into Love is a Many Splendored Thing, and as the sweat on our collective brows would begin to cool, he'd pull out his ace...

Twilight Time.

Ugh, Twilight Time. Even at 5 years old, that song broke my heart. No words, just music. And it moved me deeply. I've been able to hear it only in my head for the past 7 years or so and I cannot think of one thing that I want more than to hear him play it again. In his own special way. The way that I have searched for and have failed to find.


When Papa passed, I mourned. I never understood that word before that moment he left. But then I knew it so well, because he was gone, and he took it all with him. His scratchy beard, the smell of car grease on his skin, the nicknames that only he called us, his piano playing. Gone. I cry now while I write this, because the loss remains. And I want it all back.

I decided to start taking piano lessons. I decided it would be a good idea to learn what notes were and where they lived on the piano. I decided that it was time for me to know what all those little loopdeedoos and flags on sheet music were. I decided that this would be the way for me to finally be able to play all of his songs to myself so I could listen to them again.

I went for my first lesson today. The instructor asked me what my skill level was, to which I replied,

"I don't know where 'C' is. I play by ear. I know nothing."


Then he asked me to play him something. I played him about 10 seconds of a Chopin song Angelo had taught me 15 years ago. He had a tape casette recording of this song and we obsessed over it until it became this ridiculous mutation of the original.

This definitely gave the instructor the wrong idea. I think he [so wrongly] thought that I knew what I was doing.

The next 30 minutes was a whirlwind of phrases such as, "No start with your third finger, " "One and a-two, and-a skip, and a-three, and-a.." "that empty circle with the dot means it is 2.5 notes" and the very popular "Start again." At minute 28, I started crying. Commence meltdown sequence...

"I don't understand anything that you are saying! All the ones and a-twos... and...I don't know what b flat means! Or how to find it! I don't know any of this! I was being honest! I only know how to memorize which keys get hit at the same time and the rest is my ear saying which way to go! Up or down! Up or down! I ONLY KNOW UP OR DOWN! "

When I got home tonight, I played every song I knew to exorcise the lesson demon. Half way through an old Sicilian folk song that Papa Joe frequented, it hit me...

I'm a Bellomo. We don't do piano lessons.

Just figure it out. Use whatever fingers you want. Let your ear tell you where to go. If you get stuck, call your brother.

Because, here's the thing... I want to hear Twilight Time again. Badly. But I don't want to hear a "lessoned" version of it. I want to hear Papa Joe's version. The version that's in my blood. So help me, I am going to find it, and when I do, I'll finally be home again. And I cannot fucking wait.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

The Gospel According to Danny







Don't talk to me about digital. I've got hypo in my veins. The stains you see on my shirts are Dektol. I like the dark room, the radio, the yellow light glowing. I rip the printing paper into quarters. One square is swimming in the Dektol. Through the clear, brown liquid I see my work emerging – my picture. Then I take it, the little piece, and give it away, a gift, to the person pictured in it, a return for what they have given me. Thirty years pass. People die. Children grow old. They keep the little piece, stuck up on a wall with thumbtacks, creased and stained: themselves, young and alive, forever. That is photography.

-D. Lyon (photographer, keepin-it-realist, personal hero)


Thursday, July 21, 2011

#sickmoviebro



Sick movie, right bro? Just some friends, on a roof, raging.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Sarah Rayne has Skillz.




She does. But whatever, you guys. Calm down, because it's not even a big deal. It's just fact. So you don't need to freak out about it, you just need to deal. She has skills.

And she will share them with you.

Like, check this out...

1. She steals. As in she's a thief. As in literally. As in mini bars and reality television production cheeseburgers. But she will give all of her spoils to you.

2. Sarah has 3 different (legitimate) music projects going on (that I know about). One with her bros because she is a family oriented person, one with her friend Brian because she is a good friend who likes to collaborate freely, and one on her own because she is an independent woman with a keen sense of self.

3. If you are crying, she will take a picture of your face.

4. If you are laughing, she will make it worse and take it to the next level with dick jokes.

5. Sarah has a Monday night beard during dodgeball season.

6. She knows every swimming pool game in existence. And if you try to make one up to throw her off, she will have it wired immediately and add three new rules that make it more satisfying than it ever was when you were playing it without her.

7. When playing sports and doing general athletics, Sarah does not put her hair up in a ponytail.

8. She will go to the beach with you at 4am. This is "hearsay," but I believe it to be true with all my heart.

9. Sarah will make you feel OK about looking up the short skirts of women who walk by while you are floating in a pool.

10. No one, and I mean no one, can "do dead" better than Sarah Rayne.

11. She makes coffee cake that can and will open up your soul.

12. She always has extra capes.

13. She will make you feel like you are full of worth on your most worthless days. I swear. It is some kind of sweet black magic.

If it weren't 3AM, I'd keep going. Anyways, I'm glad I got at least this much off my chest. In summation, Sarah clearly has skills. If you see her, remind her of that. And also tell her I love her. Because I do. So much. How could I not?*

*see below.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

And Another Thing

I've changed my mind about a few things.
Insert randomly chosen photograph here...
Cool.
Goodnight.

What Is Up



Making my way back over here.
I have Netflix and it's ruining my life.
I love it so much.
The good news is, I'm in the mood to write starting tomorrow. It's just a hunch.
But I'm thirty now.
Which means I get to call "a hunch" my intuition.
And no one effs with intuition.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Googling Sophia Loren

My Google search history for the past week...

1. Young Sophia Loren Underwear
2. Reddit True Story
3. Pet import Russia
4. Cock sock
5. What do you call it when two guys' dicks accidentally touch?
6. Thesaurus truth
7. analog emoticons
8. How often should you cut your hair?
9. Pet import Japan
10. Maple Center

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

52 Card Pickup



During one of my extended stays with Great Aunt Harriet, she asked me if I wanted to play 52 card pickup.

I looked down at her wrinkled hands and saw her thickened, yellow nails gripping the worn, soft-blue deck of cards that had taught me how to play such staples as WAR, Go Fish, Rummy, Gin Rummy, and Slap Jack.

"Yes."

She smiled and patted the so-blonde-it-looked-invisible hair on my oversized head and we walked into the kitchen her mobile home.

"Alright, pay attention. I don't wanna explain this twice."


The deck of cards began flying madly into the air as she laughed so violently in my face that her chin hairs shook.

As the cards began to settle, her laugh trailed off into tiny hiccups. After a moment of my stunned silence, she pointed at the ground...

"There. 52 cards. Pick em up."


and walked out of the room.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Chiamare



Grandma Mary used to call everyday.
Every. Single. Day.

It was the usual,

"How are you?"
"Have you eaten?"
"Come over for a visit and we'll make some dead bones*."

I think part of the reason she called was because she knew the five of us were home alone wrecking some kind of havoc, as five siblings left to their own devices in a two-story house will do.

She only lived a mile away; less if you were an 11 year-old who knew the horse trails that tentacled through the neighborhoods like the back of her hand. She could have just as easily drove by and caught us chucking kitchen knives into the overgrown lawn, or peeked through the window just as some small body was mid-flight between the banister and the pile of pillows, blankets, and stuffed animals that were carelessly piled at the bottom of the staircase.

I suppose she knew better. Or rather, I think she didn't want to spoil our homemade fun.

I would try my best to quickly get her off the phone without letting on my intention. It was one lovely land line for our seven-person household, and call waiting was not in our budget. I had important phone calls I was waiting for; at any moment Joey Fama could be crank calling me to yell "Boobs!" into the receiver. If I missed that call, he'd move on to the next girl on his list and she'd be the one who would get to punch him the next day at school. And I was not one to pass up the opportunity to punch a cute boy in the arm.

At the time, I was sure she was not privy to my hurried, preteen impatience.
But now. Looking back.

Grandma doesn't live a mile away anymore. And I haven't run through horse trails in longer time than I've had my driver's license. And dead bones only get made for weddings. Or funerals.

And Grandma doesn't call everyday anymore. I think now it's my turn. I think it's been my turn for some time now.

When I do pick up the phone and dial my most familial/familiar area code and she picks up, I can't keep her on the phone long enough. Her words are kind and thoughtful, though they come out slower and with quiet cadence. I always want to tell her that I'm sorry I don't call more often, that I miss her, and that I will come see her soon. She always tells me the same thing.

"Melanie, you are always in my heart. Even when I don't see you. You're always there. You all are."

*dead bones are my favorite cookie of all time. An old tradition in my family that came about purely by mistake.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Revisiting McCambridge Park



This photo is from my dad and Uncle Sam's 10th birthday. That's my Uncle Dick kneeling, and my effortlessly beautiful Grandma keeping everyone steady. When we asked Dad (the lanky kid on the left) what he wanted to do for his big six-zero, he sent out this email.

Hi Everyone,
Here is the picture that will be 50 years old next Friday afternoon. It was taken in McCambridge Park in Burbank and when we developed it, Grandma really liked it, and Uncle Sam said "Me too!", and Uncle Dick said "It's groovy". I said "You know, we should take another one on our 60th birthday so it will be all of us in two photographs that are exactly 50 years old". Papa Joe said "Good idea," and I was put in charge of remembering to do it. So that is the true story.
Love, Dad

So that's what we did. I got to do the reshoot. A far cry from the perfection of Papa Joe's eye that I will endlessly be chasing, but I'm proud to be the next Bellomo to snap this shot.



Pretty close, eh? My favorite part was right after...


Happy Birthday, Pop!


Monday, September 6, 2010

RIP Barnaby




I really don't know how to do this, yet. I don't know how to write about it. These pictures are the best I can do right now, but he deserves so much more. Rest in peace, my little one.
Oh how I miss you so much more than I know how to say, except for that I love you the same way. So much more than I know how to say.

Doing What I Do Not Do

I am not a wedding photographer.

Nothing about the way I shoot lends itself to being a wedding photographer (film, labs, old heavy cameras, waiting). I do not have business cards, especially ones with the words, "Weddings, Bar Mitzvahs, and Special Events" written beneath my name . I am incapable of charging a fee, for fear that the photos will not turn out and I will be thought of with regret forever after. I detest giving people direction; the phrase, "Move a little to your left," makes me ill. I avoid weddings like one avoids an ex-boyfriend after gaining 15 lbs; you do it if you have to, but you better be wearing a badass dress and have a "plus one."

I am not a wedding photographer. But my life as of late would suggest otherwise.

A year ago, Gabe, a friend from college, asked if I ever shot weddings. I said I had once, but, well, see above. He urged me to think about it, that his fiance loved my photos, and they, above all else, would love to have me there. So I thought about it. I thought about where I would be in August of 2010, I thought of how my photo skills would have surely progressed, I thought of how nice it would be to visit the state my grandparents came from.

But there was another thought happening somewhere in my subconscious as the word, "Sure," so effortlessly tumbled out of my big mouth.... There's something about events that are a year away. I always think they'll never really happen.

As the rental car swerved deep into the Poconos Mountains, further and further away from civilization, I thought,

"This is, in fact, happening."


While Paul and Jill (guests of the wedding and my ride) helped me to recount the times we must have met during our four years at the same college I began to get genuinely excited about the people I would be seeing. The people I vaguely remembered, but knew I thought I really liked I'm pretty sure I hoped.

We arrived at the house where most everyone would be staying and the festivities were well under way. The wedding was scheduled for the next day and friends and family from all over the country were congregating at this impossibly beautiful farm house to "pre-party" as we used to call it at Colorado State.

I found Gabe right away and gave him a big hug. The truth is, I was flattered. Gabe had always kept in touch. His perseverance was unmatched. He sent postcards on a regular basis, followed my blog and berated me to post more, checked in on my website, and just plain cared about what was going on in my life, even when I was silent for months at a time. I was happy to be there with him and for him. Kind of like a way to make up for my lackluster 3 to his sparkling 50 postcards sent. To set the good friend score even and show him that I do value our friendship, regardless of the fact that I had not seen him in more years than I had known him. Oh, and the bride, Lea, was one of the most lovely ladies I had met so far this century.

But that is not the point of this story. The point of this story is that I am not a wedding photographer.

Gabe showed me to my room and I began to unpack. My dress went on a hanger, my book on the bedside table, my toothbrush by the sink, and my charger in the phone. Then onto my film and the systematic divvying up of how many rolls would be allotted for what. Finally I grabbed 1 of the 3 rolls set aside for that night and the precious time to hide behind my camera had arrived. I went to my bag to get it.

My parents once left my little brother behind at a rest stop during a cross country road trip. They realized it a few miles down the road, sped back, and swooped him up, barely causing a wrinkle in our family vacation.

My camera, unlike, my little brother, was not a few miles down the road. No, no, it was, say, 2700 miles down the road, AKA, on the other side of the country. It is difficult to relay the pure horror-agony-panic trifecta that set in the moment I realized that my entire purpose of being at that moment was not with me.

My first instinct was to run, naturally. Because, ya, that made sense. Just run away and never come back and they'll think you died and they'll never ever know that you destroyed the single most important day of their young lives. This truly seemed like a more than viable, and flat out reasonable solution. But there were too many of them! They were everywhere. In the halls, behind every corner, outside, inside, even a few passed out in the field leading to the road, no doubt.

Running was out. Being a grown-up was in.

A short prayer: "Dear God, please let there be cell reception up here in your gorgeous mountains." as I dialed my home number.

"Jon. I left my camera at home."

The next hour was a blur of Jon scouring Craigslist for old Nikons, me sobbing through phone calls to strangers in Scranton asking if they'd take $175 (all the dough I had on me) instead of $250 for their camera, and occasional silent mental breakdowns every 10 minutes or so. Finally we found Russian Steve in Allentown selling an old Nikon for the right price and promising in the most unsettling tone,

"You can drust me, eet workz. Eet workz pearfectly."

Up at 6am to start my 2 1/2 hour drive to Allentown to test his camera, drive back, and make it to the Poconos by 11:30am to start shooting the girls getting pretty and the boys hitting the back 9. Fat chance. Or more specifically, morbidly-obese-needs-stomach-stapling chance.

For the first time in my life, I did not get lost driving to a new place from a new place. That was the only thing that went right that morning. Russian Steve did have an old Nikon, but "eet" did not work. At all.

Mid-meltdown on his couch under a painting of Jesus at Gethsemane, he revealed to me that he did have this other Nikon. This other Nikon caused a series of begging and pleading with Russian Steve to please accept a personal check on top of my $175 so that I could purchase it and not have to kill myself because I single handedly ruined an old friend's wedding day. He finally conceded and handed over a beautiful old Nikon F4. A dream camera of mine, to be honest, but the glory of my possession of it fell flat in this veritable nightmare.

I believe I kept my fingers crossed the entire drive back to the Poconos, hoping against hope that this F4 would not only work, but take beautiful photos and save the God-damned, God-forsaken day.

I arrived at the bridal suite at 12pm and the ladies had just begun getting their hairs done.

Here's what happened next...




I think if I were a wedding photographer, this experience may have kicked me right out of the business. Luckily, I am not a wedding photographer, and this experience was one of the most special and fun I have had in quite some time. And though I didn't have my "plus one," I sure as shit had one badass dress.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Jenny O + Scout: Una Storia d'Amore

Trovare.

Amare.


Lasciare.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Nikkormat, Jr.

Sophia using my old Nikkormat. She shot an entire roll that day. Only needed help winding it; understandable considering its weight/size in proportion to her.
It felt so strange having to explain that she'd have to wait a week before she saw the photos that she took.
And the photos that she took... Amazing. Mostly dogs and people with no heads. And a lot of photos of her brother, Joe. Head included.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

Sandypede


Dodgeball
Originally uploaded by World Dodgeball Society
The Power of Sandy Compels You.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

The Getty

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Baby Biggs and Ry-Ry Christ

Rebecca and Ryan got married this summer in St Lucia. I was lucky enough to be there. Aw, Baby Biggs!



Wednesday, May 12, 2010

I Got My Philosophy



It was probably Spring break. I was home and mid-thaw from spending the winter knee-deep in snow at Colorado State. I was at the point in my “don’t-live-at-home-anymore” stage where I thought I had learned enough to have a valid opinion. And the first opinion I decided I had was that Ben Folds played some bad ass piano.


Now, me liking a musician that hadn’t been hand fed to me by one of my siblings was unheard of. My childhood is not recalled by how old I was or what year it happened to be, but rather, which band or album I (and my siblings) was obsessed with at any given time. Each of them had been responsible for one super great obsession.


Sarah aka The Morning Drive Phase: Blizzard of Oz and Houses of The Holy

Mary aka The I Love Calvin Broadus Phase: The Chronic

Angelo aka The Rap is Crap Phase: Metallica, namely, Master of Puppets

Tim aka The Kinder Phase: Little Bunny FooFoo


I never had the need to develop my own musical tastes, as my sisters and brothers were clearly holding it down for me. But being under 20, and over 800 miles away will cause you to establish your own idea of what is awesome. Ben Folds was making me play air-piano way hard and I couldn’t wait to get back to Cali and show the sibs my new moves.


The day I got home, I was sent to the valley to pick up the baby brother from school. Lil Tim was a mess of burgundy with gold trimmings and smelling like a pep rally as he hopped in the passenger’s seat of the Chevy Blazer. We did the customary exchange of yelling nicknames at each other (“Tim-Tam!” “Smellanie!”), and headed back toward the 405.


He asked me how college was going and I asked him how Molly* was. I answered that college was still cold and he answered that he wanted me to stop asking him how Molly was every time we spoke. Once the formalities were out of the way, I decided to lay it on him. We had just entered the turn into Simi Valley and the Ronald Reagan Freeway was uncommonly traffic-free.


“Tim, check this out.”


I pressed play and turned the dial clockwise.


“Song for the Dumped” comes out of the gates like a 2-ton Brahma bull with mad cow disease. It begins with the kind of musical gusto and hysteria that most songs take 2 or 3 verses to build up to. A veritable free-for-all of violent strikes to the piano that cause your neck to joyously whiplash in lunatic rhythm for almost 4 minutes.

I looked over at Tim who seemed more horrified at my frenzied antics than impressed by my new favorite song. Fudge. I blew it. I mean, I don’t know what I had expected.


Or wait... Yes I do... I expected Tim to be completely taken with the music, magically know the words, and wildly sing-a-long with me while we sped down the 118 to our First St exit. I immediately let go of the dream, and turned on KNX 1070 News Radio for the rest of the drive.


I didn’t call home very often when I was in Colorado. When you’re away from home, you assume everyone’s in a holding pattern until you get back (FYI to any teenage readers: NOT THE CASE).


I was back home the day after classes ended for the Summer. I went to visit Tim at work and bring him a sandwich from The Hat. I walked into his mini-office and heard “Philosophy” blasting through the speakers of a boom box sitting on top of the file cabinet. Sitting at the desk was Tim, mouthing the words and feeling it. Like, for real.


This was 10 years ago.


Tonight, Tim-Tam and I are going to see Ben Folds beat the shit out of his piano live for our first time. No doubt, we will be completely taken with music, magically know all the words, and wildly sing-a-long.


PS Thanks, Eric.


*Molly is the girl Tim had a crush on for about 1 week in the third grade.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Oh, BTW...


dodgeball
Originally uploaded by LA Dodgeball
Dodgeball is back.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Everyday Miracles


Eric and Doug living life to the fullest.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Thursday, March 4, 2010

"Why I Love Richard Christy" by Melanie



Richard Christy* falls asleep listening to this; his favorite scary soundtrack.

Ever. Single. Night.

His fiance listens along with him.

Super strange, I know. But here's what really got me.... there's a part in the tape where a woman starts screaming and it wakes up Richard's fiance and scares the shit outta her.

So...

Richard made a special version of the tape where the screaming has been mixed down. And that is why I love Richard Christy.

Well that and because he has drummed in metal bands named "DEATH" and "Charred Walls of the Damned."

Oh Richard. Just look at you.



*Richard Christy

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Saul Leiter aka Love of My Life

I love Saul Leiter. I do, so deeply, and usually spend my last waking moments with him in my bed each night. He gives me sweet dreams. Early Color is my single most favorite photography book ever in the whole entire world. Look...

I try to spend time with my other loves: Parr, Eggleston, Winograd, and Lyon.....
But Saul has my heart.
Here. One more, then goodnight...
OK. Goodnight.
M

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Expert Dance Moves

I logged in to my YouTube account after many months and found that my brother, Angelo, has been using it to upload little movies he makes at work. I CANNOT stop watching this one. It is bringing me so much joy, especially the boy on the far right during the first 4 seconds of the video.

Know Your P's and K's



Dear Angelo,
I'm cataloging (see below), lest we forget.
From, Melanie

  • Stop ik, that hurks.
  • One Hundrek.
  • Angee, do you wanna get some copfkee?
  • I got pulled over by the copks last night.
  • I have the hipkups.
  • I drokked the baby on accident.
  • Has anyone seen my keyps?
  • I'm on Team Edwark.
  • You're stupik.
  • That's a Corgi on my tea cupk.
  • Publiksher's Clearing Houkse.
  • I cannok believe you just said that.