Sunday, April 26, 2015

Polaroids That Never Faded


I was working as a unit secretary in a psychiatric hospital in a city I lived in for a short time in my 20s.  My desk was part of a larger nurses' stations where rolling carts sat full of case files in three ring notebooks. Around my desk were of all kinds of cabinets full of things like office supplies and hotel-sized shampoo bottles for those who checked into the hospital that had not packed a bag. In the rooms down the hallways were people carrying the heaviest of sorrows.

Days at this job were stressful, but holidays, especially holiday evenings, were strangely peaceful - the phone unusually quiet, a lot of staff on vacation. On these nights, things would get so slow I would open cabinets in the nurses' station and clear out clutter just to keep busy, rustling through shelves or cabinets that had been ignored for years looking for things to organize. The one cabinet I never dared touch was the oddly narrow cabinet with the lock on it behind my desk. I never went looking for the key since I was too scared of what I'd find in the cabinet - I had a strange feeling about it. Even on the busiest of days, I'd look at that cabinet, and think about what could possibly be in there....

It was Christmas night. I was at work. Through the window I could see a gentle snow was falling, snowflakes lit up by the bright light outside shining toward the parking lot. Everyone was calm that night, everyone was quiet.

I had a few more hours on the clock so I looked for ways to busy myself. Every drawer, cabinet and shelf had been cleaned and organized and the only thing left was the strange narrow cabinet door with the lock.  I hesitantly made the decision to ask the charge nurse for the key even though I intuitively knew that what I would see in there would stay with me, haunt me, from the moment I opened the door for the rest of my life. After an extensive search to find the key on that very quiet Christmas night, I turned the lock for the first time in over a decade. 

That is when my heart slid down, heavy and full of pounding ache.

It was a many-years-old group of Polaroids, though not even slightly faded - maybe because light hadn't touched them for so many years.



There were stacks and stacks of Polaroid photos. Each stack, from the front of the cabinet all the way to the far back, was organized by date, wrapped in rubber bands so old and brittle that they broke as I took them off.  It was the images of all the adolescents who had been checked into that hospital in the 1980s and early 1990s - kids who had been depressed or wrought with anxiety, addicted, broken, scared, and scarred. The heaviness of their sorrow was still somehow palpable - I could feel the heaviness of it in my hands as I held the photos.

All the photos were of kids from Generation X.

There was nothing else to do on that Christmas night - the filing was caught up and the phone sat silent - so I looked through the stacks at each person as they had been photographed - standing a few feet away from where I stood at that moment, but in a different decade in time. Polaroids were taken of the patients to put into their case files to help the hospital staff keep track of who they were. In front of a background of institutional looking doors leading to an empty hall were the pictures of these kids, some forcing an obligatory half-smile, some looking really tired, a few with haughty looks and crossed arms in some stance of self-preservation. Outfits worn in those polaroids reflected goth, punk, and suburbia.  Make-up and jewelry showed an era since passed. Sad eyes reflected a time in history when kids earned the collective name Latchkey Kids, when kids earned the collective name Throwaways. 

For a moment, I wanted to scoop up all these photos and take them to my truck sitting frozen in the dark parking lot, to rescue them, to take them home and keep them safely on some shelf, sealed up in some box that could not be opened by the wrong person, by some box that could keep them protected. I asked the charge nurse what I should do with the photos who told me to put them into the bin under my desk where all the hospital's confidential documents would wait to get shredded. I sat in my rolling chair as I slowly and painstakingly placed the photos in the bin one by one and two by two and worried for every face I saw as the images went into the bin, thinking to myself:

Where is this person now, and are they okay?
Are they still alive?

It seems strange that our society is set up in a way that a broken soul checks into a place for a time, for traces of their pain to be written up in notes by caseworkers, for an image of them to be left behind in a dark cabinet and not found until fifteen or so years later.

How could I not be haunted by those photographs that night as I desperately tried to sleep?  How can I not still be haunted by them now?




Sometimes I still dream I'm holding the photos, trying to figure out some safe place to take them. Sometimes I dream I am trying to find a sacred place to carefully hide them.

As I put the last of these kids' images into the bin, I felt this burning within me that these kids' stories should never be forgotten. While I did not know the exact details of their lives, a picture really is worth a thousand words, and knowing what I know now about the general state of society that existed in the growing up years of Generation X, I now know their stories quite well. I know the collective experience they had, that we had. Children were generally not valued in American society in the young years of Generation X, and teenagers were often valued even less.

This job I had at this psychiatric hospital, this glimpse into some of the darkest brokenness of humanity taught me an enormous amount. It also left me with a touch of heaviness that I've never been able to shake.

A few feet from my desk, people had mental breakdowns, EMTs brought in people strapped down to gurneys that the nearby emergency room physically could not handle, I saw things in the hallways that were unspeakable, I was reminded daily of how fragile we all are in the wake of tragedy, addiction, and abuse. I saw depression on faces that showed a deeper despondency that any human should ever have to experience.  But nothing from that place haunts me like the polaroids - those unfaded polaroids.

As someone who both reads and writes a lot about Generation X, I see from others and feel in my own heart the issue that, as a generation, we feel overlooked, not paid attention to. That was the problem of our childhood, of our adolescence, and even of now.  And that has been just one small piece of many larger problems.




I have to believe that God or the saints have somehow saved all the bits and pieces that we left behind - the mementos of our life, the broken pieces, the pictures, both faded and unfaded. I have to believe that they hold them carefully in some safe place until a time when all the sorrows of this world can make sense, when we can all finally be made whole.

Your story is alive, your pain was not for nothing. When the polaroids remain unfaded, do the memories?  When the color is still as vivid as ever, is the pain?

Gen X, you are not forgotten. You are remembered in ways you do not realize, and will continue to be. You are a generation that, according to the cycles of history, does and will contribute a huge amount to society and who does not ask for much in return.  

You are extraordinary for having survived such extraordinary circumstances. 



You, Gen X, are an unfaded polaroid.





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(c) 2015 by Chloe Koffas all rights reserved on writing/images




Saturday, March 7, 2015

School House Rock Live!





I can't think of anything more quintessential to the formative years of Gen X than the School House Rock series we used to enjoy in between cartoons on Saturday mornings....




I recently went with a friend I grew up with, my husband, and my daughter to the Montgomery Theater in San Jose, CA where we watched School House Rock Live. They did a great job of making many of the most well-loved School House Rock characters come alive on stage.



A little bit of math, some politics, some grammar, some good music to go with it, and we were all enjoying ourselves no matter what our age. The stage was full of all kinds of talented kids from elementary school to high school.  We gave them a standing ovation at the end for doing such a great job.

It was fun to see all the Gen Xers there with their kids, nieces, and nephews. Just another fun way of passing down the good stuff from our generation to the next one.



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(c) 2015 photos and writing by Chloe Koffas - all rights reserved

Sunday, February 8, 2015

The Breakfast Club



February 15, 1985 - 30 years ago - The Breakfast Club came out in theaters. I was in elementary school at the time and didn't see this Brat Pack film until high school. I graduated ten years later, but the issues of the movie still existed then, just as they still do now. What the film teaches us is that we have more in common with each other than we often initially realize, and that we all struggle with isolation, and pressure, and trying to be true to ourselves. Being human means having angst, being a teenager gives you an extra dose of it. John Hughes wrote/produced/directed what is considered one of the best high school movies of all time, and it has a certain timelessness to it. Even their clothes are somehow timeless.

The flashback edition which I hope to see someday has background commentary by the actors.

Photo from Amazon - link below:



This is considered by many to be the quintessential movie of Generation X. One of the many things I love about my generation is that we are known for breaking the mold in which we found ourselves, for being the first generation to be open to others even if they came from a very different background, for being people who could hang out in multiple social circles that were all very different from each other.

From the end of the movie, in an essay/letter written to their principal is the movie's most well-loved quote: 

"You see us as you want to see us. In the simplest terms, in the most convenient definitions. But what we found out is that each one of us is a brain, and an athlete, and a basket case, a princess, and a criminal..."  -The Breakfast Club



from wanelo.com 


Now that 30 years have gone by, and we are now the age of the adults in the movie, this is a reminder to us of how to treat our own kids, of how to treat the younger generation in general so that they don't see us the way the kids in the movie saw the older generation. As we grow older and become the "powers that be" it's good to remember the angst that those older than us once gave us, and to not make the same mistakes.  


"And these children that you spit on as they try to change their worlds are immune to your consultation.  They're quite aware of what they're going through."   


-David Bowie 

"To find out who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize."  

-Voltaire



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(c) 2015 - by Chloe Koffas





Thursday, January 1, 2015

Why We Need New Beginnings



Northern California at Sunrise -

Photography from the back seat of a car heading through the hills of the Pacheco Pass toward Central California....




A new year begins and I wonder if I filled the last one with everything I should have. Last year is now gone, and if I keep wondering or worrying, I'm not living in the present.  And all we truly have is the present.  










The sun shows its glow, but does not yet show itself -  and it's strange the way a captured moment can look like it is both sunrise and sunset at the same time.



The first time I saw the sun rise over the hills of Northern California was about ten years ago after visiting an Orthodox Christian monastery with friends. I never forgot that morning or how purified my soul felt as we left there. The last time I saw the Northern California sunrise was not so long ago - the sun was both pink and yellow shunting its warming rays on the chilly, tired earth, the hills soft blue in the distance.



So many times I have prayed, asking God, "Where are you?"  or

"Why aren't you listening?"  or

"Why won't you help me?"

And I have finally begun to look back on my life and see how many of those seemingly unheard prayers were being answered incrementallyslowly, then exponentially.

It often happened the way the sun rises so seemingly slowly when you are waiting for it, the way the darkness of night seems so reluctant to leave. Yet we are traveling around the sun at over 66,000 miles an hour.

Morning goes by and noon comes - the sun is full in the sky above us, covering us and our surroundings with 360 degrees of light





Sometimes when I see the sun rise, this unexpected peace comes over me that everything is going to be okay - even when a hundred unfitted puzzle pieces lay around waiting for their place in the short term, I know in these moments that the bigger picture will be beautiful when those pieces come together.

Still, we wait for those pieces to come together. And this is why we need new beginnings - because of all that goes wrong in this broken down world. We need new beginnings so we can once again have hope that all those scattered puzzle pieces of our lives will eventually fit together. We need new beginnings because we mess up, because we misunderstand, because we are misunderstood.


Many mornings in my life I did not see the sun rise in this life because I was focused on the scratches on the window.


But the sun continued to rise,
again and again.


Here's to new beginnings, here's to all our dreams coming true - even if not as soon as we would like them to - even if just moment by moment, even if it all happens slowly and incrementally, may it all happen exponentially. 







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(c) 2015 writing and photography by Chloe Koffas, all rights reserved







Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Christmas Classics of Generation X



There is a whole set of Christmas Classics that Generation X remembers watching in their growing up years....





We got this keepsake set a few years back that includes the holiday specials along with the music that goes with them.  It's the time of year to take this out again.






Images I remember from my Generation X childhood....






This is the 50th anniversary of Rudolph and the US Postal Service is issuing stamps with the characters from the holiday special.  




This set includes Rudolph, the Frosty the Snowman set, Santa Claus is Coming to Town, The Little Drummer Boy, and one I'd never seen before getting this box set: Cricket on the Hearth.


Happiest of holidays, Gen X ~



Tuesday, November 18, 2014

A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving and a Couple of Things I'm Thankful For




A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving initially aired in 1973, so Generation X remembers watching this each November during our growing up years...








One of the biggest things I am thankful for right now is all the people who have visited my blog this year for the first time, and I'm just as thankful for those who have come back for the hundredth time.





These DVDs get pulled out every year when in the fall and winter for my family and I to enjoy, sometimes with friends, and sometimes with good food. There's something about this time of the year when it comes to the pop culture of the formative years of Generation X - the movies and specials, the characters we grew to love, and everything else.

Thank you fellow Xers, for sharing this time of the year with me ~


Sunday, November 9, 2014

The Fall of the Berlin Wall - 25 Years Ago Today


25 years ago today was when The Berlin Wall fell. The falling of the wall was one of the biggest international events, if not the biggest event, to happen during the formative years of Generation X. 

I had always wanted a piece of the wall of my own.




Having grown up Generation X, we saw pretty much everything crumble around us, from what we watched on the news, to our families and society in general. It was an era where a lot went wrong. That is why I clung to God throughout my childhood - everything fell apart around me and it was clear that nothing was going to be consistent. I took that faith into my adulthood as I've struggled with the larger questions like:

1) Is God really there?
2) If so, does he listen to our prayers?
3) If so, does he listen to me?

From the third question came this thing that I do every so often: I pray a prayer that would be mathematically impossible (or the odds would be astronomical) for these things to randomly come true - only possible for it to be answered by a Higher Power capable of anything. In other words, I ask for something incredibly detailed, profoundly specific, and extremely random so that I know that that if the prayer gets answered it is not just a coincidence but really God.




Since my connection to my generation is very important to me, and since the fall of the Wall was so important to the experience of my generation, this was my prayer that I prayed a few years ago:

"I would like you to give me my own piece of the Berlin Wall. I'd like it to be given to me by someone who was there right when (or soon after) the wall fell who chiseled it out themselves so I know it is the real thing. I would like that person to be a Gen Xer. I would like them to bring a large piece with them to my house, and then break off a smaller piece for me to keep so that I can see the larger piece it comes from and so I know it is 100% authentic. I'd like this all to happen right before the 25th anniversary of the falling of the wall."

Right as I was about to move away from Portland Oregon last spring, some friends came over to visit. One of my friends told me she had a gift for me - it was a poster she had bought on the street in Berlin shortly after the wall fell. She had kept it all those years in storage in her Portland house. She also had brought a piece of the wall to show me, and all the sudden she unexpectedly felt the inspiration to break off a piece of her piece to give to me. She borrowed a hammer, took her piece to the floor of my garage and broke off a piece for me.

I was in shock - the prayer had been answered down to every detail.  I grabbed my camera and took photos of the poster, the hammer, my piece of the wall...




What I learned from this experience:

1) We are all connected to something much larger to ourselves in a way much more substantial and tangible than we can imagine.
2) While we struggle with how much our prayers are heard and why some do not seem to get answered, prayers do get answered.
3) We are loved far, far beyond what we could possibly imagine.

The dust from the Berlin Wall sits in the seams in the cement of the garage in my old house in Portland Oregon, because there was a moment in space and time when the whole universe bent down and bowed before me so something extraordinary could happen.

The most consistent thing to happen in our lives - the lives of Generation X - was a constant crumbling of everything around us, and the biggest international event to happen in our formative years was the crumbling of a giant monolithic wall. As we head from one year in time to another, may all the walls of our lives fall - every wall that keeps us from something good - every wall that keeps us isolated, every wall that keeps us believing that our prayers go unheard...  





...our prayers are heard. 


For H.P. 

 (c) Chloe Koffas - all rights reserved. If anyone knows the photographer who took the picture for this poster, email me and I will credit them ~