lydy: (Default)
[personal profile] lydy
A long time ago, so long ago that it was part of a different life, I was married. We were all in our twenties, a small group of fans that ran a convention in Iowa City called Icon, and belonged to a student group called SFLIS. My husband, Nigel, his brother Brandon, Les, Lynnette, Jim, Eleanor, Jeannette, Linea, Arthur, some small number of others. Everything was intense and fraught and there were many four in the morning conversations about love and sex and world peace and communism. Everyone slept with everyone else unless they didn't. There was an informal sort of communism, from each according to his student loan, to each according to his bank balance. If you didn't do this when you were in your early twenties, you got gypped. This is part of the charm of growing up, that five or ten years of out-running your theoretical headlights, slamming into reality again and again and sometimes breaking straight on through to the other side.

All these years later, three lives later, those years remain a green gap, like a beautiful ravine in my life. It's deep and wide, and there is no bridge. I can hear the river down at the bottom, and the trees are amazingly green, but the ground falls away almost straight down. No way back.

When Nigel and I broke up, I was kicked out of his family. That made me sad. Twelve years later, when I went to an Icon, he was too unhappy at my presence to be able to come out and hang around the convention. My "date", Neil Rest, managed to mortally offend my ex-brother-in-law by saying something that he considered completely normal and pleasant, but which Brandon could not interpret as anything other than a vicious, personal attack. (Mind you, explaining Neil to anyone else is always a challenge.)

Once, later, I got to have a long chat with his wife Eleanor. Eleanor and I had been friends before she married Brandon. Some years after she'd been married and had one son, she'd gone batshit. I don't know what the technical term is, but she lost her mind and her therapist and she went in search of it. I believe she's now disabled. I really liked talking to Eleanor, and I've wished that I could do so again.

Today, my mother called me. Brandon Ray had died "peacefully" in Salt Lake City, UT on June 21st. He was 46. (I'm 44.)

I don't really know how I feel. I haven't made any overtures to the Ray family in ten or fifteen years. I've been wanting to. I've wanted to talk to my ex, see what his life is like, talk to his wife, talk to Brandon and Eleanor and be introduced to their son. But I haven't done any of that; I couldn't sort out in my own mind how much of this was genuine, benign interest in people who were once my friends and how much of it was a residual desire to get even with them by discombobulating their lives.

But now Brandon's dead.

And I really don't know how I feel. I think I will feel very sad, later, but at the moment I'm watching doors of possibility shutting and wondering what it means.

Date: 2006-06-24 03:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kalmn.livejournal.com
oh, sweetheart. *hug*

i expect that eleanor might appreciate a card, at least. and you could include contact information, and say something very short along the lines of you miss talking to her and you'd like to talk sometime if she wanted.

Date: 2006-06-24 03:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] marykaykare.livejournal.com
Oh my dear, I'm so sorry. Let's talk soon.

MKK

Date: 2006-07-01 02:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lmajerus.livejournal.com
I was also sad to hear about Brandon's death. The last time I saw him was around 1987 (at an Icon), almost 20 years ago. It doesn't seem possible.

Date: 2006-10-05 02:39 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orangemike.livejournal.com
It seems impossible that a time so clear in our memories could be so long ago as the calendar (lying thing that is) claims!!!!

I'd love to think that we'll see you at ICON this year.

Date: 2006-11-16 02:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] apostle-of-eris.livejournal.com
I just stumbled across this . . .
Curiously, with the recent deaths of irreplaceable links like Bob Tucker and, just this weekend, Jack Williamson, last night I dug out my E. A. Robinson to re-read Mr. Flood’s Party.

Date: 2013-08-21 05:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] david edward martin (from livejournal.com)
I remember being surprised at hearing of Brandon's death and a little worried. He was in worse shape than I was so he was my "canary in a coal mine." But now, no canary.
I still remember encountering Brandon as a freshman my final year at Iowa. He was so proud of his TI computer with its Star Wars game in which you maneuvered a ">0<" for a few minutes avoiding the "[O]".
You bring back so many memories of the sex-filled soap opera that was Iowa City SF fandom. I only dipped into it once a year so I missed a lot.
You're one of the fond memories. I'd long wondered whatever happened to you. Tonight I happened by chance to see a link to your journal. Wow.... I had no idea.

Profile

lydy: (Default)
lydy

November 2025

S M T W T F S
       1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 18th, 2026 08:00 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios