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Erica K

Erica K
Location
New Jersey, USA
Birthday
September 26
Bio
Grew up in Jackson Heights, New York, but now live in Jersey. Married and the proud owner (servant?) of 4 cats, including a little blind guy named Quincy. Jobs have included: English teacher in U.S. and abroad, cabaret performer and member of a NYC sketch comedy troupe; now a full-time legal secretary and freelance writer. Other jobs: canvasser for NYPIRG/cannery worker in Naknek, Alaska (a fisherman told me it was "the ugliest part of Alaska")/dog kennel cleaner/member of the swine and poultry crew on a California farm. Currently performing my solo show, "The Year of Dead Cats," at Stage Left Studio in NYC. http://stageleftstudio.net/ "Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better." Samuel Beckett

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Salon.com
Editor’s Pick
MAY 29, 2011 9:57AM

My Kingdom for a Fridge

Rate: 15 Flag

“The people united will never be defeated.
El pueblo unida jam
ás será vencido.”

            --Frederic Rzewski

In 1985 I was a rojita, or so I was called.  My boyfriend, let’s call him “Doug,” and I were activists, volunteers for CISPES, the Committee in Solidarity With the People of El Salvador; we met at the Marxist School (aka, “Four Parts of the Movement”) Chorus in Manhattan.  We were both students at Hunter College, actually Doug encouraged me to return to school after I’d take a few years off while living in Vermont.  Doug organized a program at school focusing on the plight of minority Hungarians living in Ceausescu’s Romania.  The main speaker was a Hungarian who had suffered repression under his regime.  Old Hungarian villages had been bulldozed and many Romanians were forcibly moved to Transylvania to dilute the Hungarian population.  It was said that the Romanian-Hungarian border was harder to cross than the Berlin Wall; Hungarians who visited family in Romania were held up for days to make sure they were not transporting Hungarian books or music.  Hungarian children were not allowed to speak their language in school and were punished for doing so.  Doug took this to heart, having a Romanian grandma, “Bubby,” who lived on the Lower East Side and made us wonderful blintzes and other specialty foods.

When I moved in with Doug on 96th Street in Spanish Harlem, I learned that the extent of his activism far surpassed my own.  Most electrical appliances were banned from our household:  no TV, no AC, no refrigerator.  All for the sake of the environment, he said.  We kept food on the window sill or the fire escape, except in the summer months; then we just bought food for the day.  I abided by his rules, but I didn’t like them.  The things we do for love. 

Doug was a musician and I was studying German with a minor in Political Science. Without the distractions of TV, he said, we could do more music together and get more studying done.  He was an early music and folk aficionado and we played guitar-recorder duets and I sang madrigals like “Flow My Tears” by John Dowland to his accompaniment on lute.  I cherished these times.

Although TV was verboten, we were allowed to go to movies at the Film Forum, Angelika or Theatre 80 on St. Mark’s Place, where they showed mostly indies, foreign films and classics.

I got accustomed to life without TV, but never to the no-fridge policy.  I understood the moral and environmental sanctity aspect of it: Freon in refrigerators and air conditioners used chlorofluorocarbons or CFCs and were infamous for greatly adding to the depletion of the earth's ozone shield, but on a 95- degree muggy summer day in our 5th floor apartment, I didn’t care.  I spent extra time at the Hunter College library and café, basking in the splendor of the AC.  I went to Key Food or D’Agostino and stood in front of open freezers, hoping the heavenly cool would carry me into the night.

I was madly in love with Doug and wanted to please him, to be as pure of spirit and as strict an environmentalist as he was, and I thought I was, but I never measured up.  I lacked the purity of purpose, the zeal.

We had a tumultuous on-again, off-again relationship: he cheated on me twice, once while I was away in Switzerland teaching English for the summer, and the second time after we forced my mom out after a three-month stay (he invited her in the first place) and our sex life went south.  He was open about his cheating, thinking it best to be honest, but it stabbed me like an icicle through the heart.

As soon as I moved out and into a studio apartment in the Bronx, I purchased a serious AC, plugged in the ample refrigerator and stocked it with fresh vegetables, fruit, milk, cheese and other perishable items.  Gone were the days of curdled milk, shriveled oranges and green cheese.  I shunned window sills and fire escapes, and blasted the TV.

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Comments

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I find Doug to be a pretty sympathetic character. Where he and I part company is his apparent willingness to gull another person into signing onto this lifestyle without some sort of full disclosure first. This guy was after all a man made to live alone. A Trotskyist perhaps?

This was an entertaining story, to say the least.
Brass,
He was/is a wonderful guy and I was mad about him. He wasn't a Trotskyite, but a rugged individualist and a very sensitive soul, like no other I have met. Unfortunately, he also suffered from mental illness and was hospitalized for a period of time. We haven't spoken in years, but I always think fondly of him and hope he is well.
Best, Erica
Very gracious of you, and I expected nothing less.
Thanks. Hugs, Erica
Remember the good things and let the bad fade. I believe this.
I believe it too.
-E
The things we do for love might be the things we do in love Erica.
This is an entertaining read to say the least...
Right you are, Mission. Well said.
Remembering the best is the only way to know your feelings were real and your time together was genuine. This is a nostalgic, bittersweet story.
♥R
This was very endearing to read, E; I enjoyed it much. R
Thank you, Fusun and Thoth. It's hard to believe that was 26 years ago, I feel so old! Hugs, E
So he was above refrigerators but not above cheating? Better you ended up with the fridge.
Pauline, yes, I guess that's true. Never thought of it that way! Once again, I was hopelessly in love and very young.
E
Yep, the things we do for love.
Crazy, isn't it?
I can dig it. Everytime I had a vegetarian girlfriend I'd think, "Great... now I have to sneak out to get a steak."
I was going to say "Lara's Theme" evidently was not your song, until your comment answering Brassawe's, which says almost more about you than your excellent post. Umm...do I get a hug now, too? ;-|
Right you are, my song was "flow my tears" and yes,hugs to you, Chicken Maan
Doug musta been good in bed. At the beginning anyway.
What a charming post Erica. I've met folks like Doug but ofr an art of the possible type as I am, the zeal is lacking. When you had to throw out the food that went bad, did you ever hit him with the "Think of all the starving people in..." line?
That's alright. Obama faked activist zeal to get elected.
The activists that I knew who had such zeal were a bit too wild eyed for me. I have a thing for uncurdled milk and air conditioning.
Nick, yes, he was.

Abrawang, good one! No, I never thought of saying that.

Linnn, Yes, some of them are overly zealous to the point of mania.
Even Lenin used a fan...
Rwoo59, Point well taken!
Amazing how easily we become the followers of others' rules, isn't it? We say it's for love, but....there is probably something else at play...excellent post! xox
Thanks, Robin. Yes, it was part-love, part-low self esteem, I think.
Erica