I've never fancied myself much a "cause walker" meaning I've never walked for diabetes or the cripple or run some horrible marathon... that's not really my speed. (and you can damn well bet that's not my fathers style either- I do get this from somewhere)
But when I found out that 170,000 people this year will be diagnosed with lung cancer, and of those 160,000 will die... it seemed that Lung Cancer needed my attention.
Well, to be fair- Nikky did. She discovered this Lung Cancer research walk in Manhattan Beach, and before we knew it we were sighed up... At that time, we thought we might push mom along in the wheelchair with us.
Obviously that didn't work out.
But we did have about 20 people with us, and we raised $2165.00 AND we had hats.... so it was a pretty sweet thing!
THen afterwards, Lydia, mom's good friend had us over to her house and she cooked us a breakfast feast extrordinaire... Let me put it this way" Creme Brule French Toast.... Fuckin' A.
Plus, we got to eat off any potentially beneficial effects the walk may have had...Thank God!
It was a really nice day to be with friends, walk for a good cause, and remember mom.
Was great.
Here are some pictures if you are so inclined.
xxx
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Friday, November 16, 2007
MEMORIAL SPEECHES
Several people have asked to see the speeches I made at the memorials- so here they are:
BASALT- OCTOBER 13, 2007
Dad asked me to keep it light and not to swear. I have a feeling I am going to fail at both
How does one speak about my mother?
Where do you even begin?
A friend of ours came over the morning after mom passed and thru tears she said “god, she was just so special, and I know that that’s what people say about everyone, but it’s just not true about everyone”
And mom was special. She was a different kind of mom. But I suppose all of you know this because mom was, in many ways, a mother to just about everyone in this room.
Whether it was taking care of you when you were hung over after a night on the railroad tracks, or cooking for you, or helping you decorate your first or your 20th apartment, or sending you Christmas jams, or taking you in on a holiday when you were an orphan, or just simply listening to you in that extra special quiet way only she had. There was always a seat at moms table.
Mom and Dad’s house was a HOME, to more than just the 4 of us. It was home to hundreds of us. And it was this very thing- this ability to bring you in, and disarm you with her humor, and strength and balls out honesty- that was what brought you home. And I think it's the reason there are so many of us here today. I think it is why this room is packed. My mother always welcomed in a stranger. We have, over the years become some kind of tribe, and mom was always the first to welcome “the new guy,” and greet them into our well established world. And she did so with such kindness. Having no obligation to do so, she took so many people under her wing and cared for them without hesitation. And when you had a problem she listened carefully, examined cautiously, tendered her decision and then gave you her opinion, whether you were ready for it or not. She made no apologies for being honest, or blunt or being right, and she often was right. Fuck man, she always was.
Which was a hard thing for a daughter. Mom always being right, when I wanted to wear shorts in the winter, she told me I shouldn't and she was right. She didn't stop me, and when I froze my ass off on the way to school damn if I didn't know she was right. She guided us gracefully to find our own way- steering, shaping, nurturing us along. Always with a watch full eye so if we really blew it she would be there, to pick you up, like a toy train and place you gently back on track. And if you were really a mess, she might give you a little shove to get you moving again.
I know very few people who can say that their mother is as close to their friends as they are- but my mom was: Look at Emily and Zoƫ, at Damaris, at Shoni, at Mimi, at Jamie, these are some of my all time closest friends, and mom somehow had a way of creating a totally separate, totally important and substantial relationship with all of them. Friendship knew no age with mom.
Probably because Mom was insane- she was totally nuts. And we loved and admired her for it.
Like the time she Pooped in a napkin at a restaurant and brought it to the table on a dare.
Or the time the a guy was mean to her friends so she went into his bathroom and peed in his Listerine bottle and then put it back on the counter.
Or, the classic- the time my mom pooped in the cat box and then asked dad to clean it out. And stood howling with Lois from the window and watched him ponder and ask… uh, I think the cat might need to go to the vet???
she was a prankster, and a hooligan and a charmer and a genius.
mom had her own vocabulary too- Claudettesse. This was reserved mostly for her animals, but we too got to share in the madness
avandazias- meant tantrum.
squinty lentil noodles is the face a cat makes when he is loving you so
muckles- the squeezable bit of cheek on a dog
hurtzocovina- that was pain
loginitas- that was poop
Tony Lopez -that was peeing your pants
and bacabas- that was the sound a milkshake makes in a glass when you tap the bottom just right
ah, I’m gonna miss that.
there is a lot to consider when considering the great force that was Claudette Carter- the mom, the friend, the cook, the decorator, the business woman, the real estate tycoon, the wife, my fathers girlfriend and the great love of his life.
of all thing she taught me- and the lessons were many, I think I take from her- her love of the irreverent and her total respect for the game of life. She was a an expert at knowing the rules and taking total delight in finding the classiest way to brake them.
And I am just so grateful to have had these precious last few months, to have been with her in health and finally in sickness. Even at the end she was still classy, graceful, elegant, present, noble, proud, powerful and irreverent. She taught us how to live BETTER And in the end, she even taught me how to die.
In the end, all we have is love, and she left us with a lot of that. There was always a place at her table for all of us, and now we leave one for her at ours.
Her absence will be an enormous presence.
LOS ANGELES- NOV 3RD 2007
I got an email the other day- from a good friend of ours who wasn’t able to make it here today. And his sentiment summed up for me something I have been feeling about mom and hadn’t been able to articulate for some time- and that is this:
“Claudette was so very good to me! I don't think anyone has been that kind to me since my mother -- in fact, strangely enough, although she was younger than I, I thought of her sometimes "in loco parentis" meaning "Claudette will know what to do..." Actually, I imagine that quite a lot of people felt the same way...”
I love that phrase "Claudette will know what to do...”
My mother was right about everything.
All the time.
It was exhausting.
Mom always knew what to do. She knew how to act, in any situation. She knew how to dress and how to decorate the world around her. She knew how to swear, and how to drive fast and not get caught. Mom understood how to work hard, but never take it all too seriously. She knew how to balance this ridiculous world that is Hollywood and keep herself and those of us around her grounded in humor and playfulness and balls out in your face honesty.
Over the past 6 months I have grown quite close with a number of mom’s friends. And getting to know so many of her wonderful friends again, I have discovered something: People loved my mother. They loved her like they loved their own mother. And that love made people almost territorial about her. And by that I mean this- mom was so open, and so available for everyone that surrounded her- that one couldn’t help but feel as thought they were being let into her innermost sanctum.
Let me put it this way: What most of us reserve for family and our very best friends- mom gave away freely to everyone.
Whether you were a co worker, or a dinner guest, or an orphan on a holiday, or a recipient of one of her many jars of Peach on Earth, or whether you simply cut her hair- mom was REAL. With EVERYONE. And EVERYONE responded to her, and appreciated her and respected her. People listened to her.
I got another email from an old friend who was one of carter’s child hood best friends and she said “when I was a kid I remember thinking that your mom was the first woman that I knew people listen to like a man. I wanted to grow up and have people listen to me like that’”
And my god who didn’t? I was speaking with Missy last night and she said that in mom’s absence she has found herself thinking- What would Claudette do? And I realize I think the same thing too- What would mom do?
But I know she taught us. And so I rely on that- because everything I know is because of her.
My mother has been my north star- my point of reference- the way with which I navagate, and although she is gone – and her absence leaves an enormous presence… it is that presence with which I know find my way.
Because mom was force. She was funny, and naughty, and kind and disciplined. So disciplined. As most of you probably know, mom spent the last several years of her life on a diet. She was always so conscious of what she put in her body, and specifically she stayed away from sugar. Even though her nickname was Cupcake- cake was NOT something she indulged in.
Until about the last month of her life… I think she felt she was making up for last time because SHE WENT FOR IT. BIG TIME.
Everyday was a different delight. Rice pudding. Tapioca. Brownies. Cupcakes. Sheet cake. Tiramisu. Fudge. Cookies. Ice cream. Smoothies. Tofutti. Trips to the stone cold creamery.
One evening she announced that tomorrow she would be wanting a Coconut Cream Pie from Dupars in Hollywood. And I’m thinking –how the hell does she even know about such a thing? I mean, this is a woman who hasn’t had any sugar of any kind in YEARS. When I explained that we were going to be alone that following day and that it might be difficult for me to run to Hollywood. She replied simply- “Send someone”
Which of course I did: Nikky in fact- went and got the pie…. Thank you Nikky.
Course, I would have done anything for her. We all would have- that’s what made us a Team.
Mom led such an extraordinary life. She reinvented herself so many times. When others couldn’t see the potential in something- Mom did. She saw the good in everything, and in everyone. But more-than that: she brought the best out in everyone she touched.
I know for me- I was the best version of myself with her in these last few months. And as heart broken as I am- I am so grateful that I had these last few months with her, to be with my mom and to redefine our relationship.
She was the queen of the remodel. And I am honored to feel as though I may have been her final project. That we all were- her final remodel was to shape us all into the Team we always had the potential to be.
She taught us how to live BETTER, And how to BE BETTER, and in the end she even taught me how to die. With grace and dignity and class and style and lots and lots of Pie.
BASALT- OCTOBER 13, 2007
Dad asked me to keep it light and not to swear. I have a feeling I am going to fail at both
How does one speak about my mother?
Where do you even begin?
A friend of ours came over the morning after mom passed and thru tears she said “god, she was just so special, and I know that that’s what people say about everyone, but it’s just not true about everyone”
And mom was special. She was a different kind of mom. But I suppose all of you know this because mom was, in many ways, a mother to just about everyone in this room.
Whether it was taking care of you when you were hung over after a night on the railroad tracks, or cooking for you, or helping you decorate your first or your 20th apartment, or sending you Christmas jams, or taking you in on a holiday when you were an orphan, or just simply listening to you in that extra special quiet way only she had. There was always a seat at moms table.
Mom and Dad’s house was a HOME, to more than just the 4 of us. It was home to hundreds of us. And it was this very thing- this ability to bring you in, and disarm you with her humor, and strength and balls out honesty- that was what brought you home. And I think it's the reason there are so many of us here today. I think it is why this room is packed. My mother always welcomed in a stranger. We have, over the years become some kind of tribe, and mom was always the first to welcome “the new guy,” and greet them into our well established world. And she did so with such kindness. Having no obligation to do so, she took so many people under her wing and cared for them without hesitation. And when you had a problem she listened carefully, examined cautiously, tendered her decision and then gave you her opinion, whether you were ready for it or not. She made no apologies for being honest, or blunt or being right, and she often was right. Fuck man, she always was.
Which was a hard thing for a daughter. Mom always being right, when I wanted to wear shorts in the winter, she told me I shouldn't and she was right. She didn't stop me, and when I froze my ass off on the way to school damn if I didn't know she was right. She guided us gracefully to find our own way- steering, shaping, nurturing us along. Always with a watch full eye so if we really blew it she would be there, to pick you up, like a toy train and place you gently back on track. And if you were really a mess, she might give you a little shove to get you moving again.
I know very few people who can say that their mother is as close to their friends as they are- but my mom was: Look at Emily and Zoƫ, at Damaris, at Shoni, at Mimi, at Jamie, these are some of my all time closest friends, and mom somehow had a way of creating a totally separate, totally important and substantial relationship with all of them. Friendship knew no age with mom.
Probably because Mom was insane- she was totally nuts. And we loved and admired her for it.
Like the time she Pooped in a napkin at a restaurant and brought it to the table on a dare.
Or the time the a guy was mean to her friends so she went into his bathroom and peed in his Listerine bottle and then put it back on the counter.
Or, the classic- the time my mom pooped in the cat box and then asked dad to clean it out. And stood howling with Lois from the window and watched him ponder and ask… uh, I think the cat might need to go to the vet???
she was a prankster, and a hooligan and a charmer and a genius.
mom had her own vocabulary too- Claudettesse. This was reserved mostly for her animals, but we too got to share in the madness
avandazias- meant tantrum.
squinty lentil noodles is the face a cat makes when he is loving you so
muckles- the squeezable bit of cheek on a dog
hurtzocovina- that was pain
loginitas- that was poop
Tony Lopez -that was peeing your pants
and bacabas- that was the sound a milkshake makes in a glass when you tap the bottom just right
ah, I’m gonna miss that.
there is a lot to consider when considering the great force that was Claudette Carter- the mom, the friend, the cook, the decorator, the business woman, the real estate tycoon, the wife, my fathers girlfriend and the great love of his life.
of all thing she taught me- and the lessons were many, I think I take from her- her love of the irreverent and her total respect for the game of life. She was a an expert at knowing the rules and taking total delight in finding the classiest way to brake them.
And I am just so grateful to have had these precious last few months, to have been with her in health and finally in sickness. Even at the end she was still classy, graceful, elegant, present, noble, proud, powerful and irreverent. She taught us how to live BETTER And in the end, she even taught me how to die.
In the end, all we have is love, and she left us with a lot of that. There was always a place at her table for all of us, and now we leave one for her at ours.
Her absence will be an enormous presence.
LOS ANGELES- NOV 3RD 2007
I got an email the other day- from a good friend of ours who wasn’t able to make it here today. And his sentiment summed up for me something I have been feeling about mom and hadn’t been able to articulate for some time- and that is this:
“Claudette was so very good to me! I don't think anyone has been that kind to me since my mother -- in fact, strangely enough, although she was younger than I, I thought of her sometimes "in loco parentis" meaning "Claudette will know what to do..." Actually, I imagine that quite a lot of people felt the same way...”
I love that phrase "Claudette will know what to do...”
My mother was right about everything.
All the time.
It was exhausting.
Mom always knew what to do. She knew how to act, in any situation. She knew how to dress and how to decorate the world around her. She knew how to swear, and how to drive fast and not get caught. Mom understood how to work hard, but never take it all too seriously. She knew how to balance this ridiculous world that is Hollywood and keep herself and those of us around her grounded in humor and playfulness and balls out in your face honesty.
Over the past 6 months I have grown quite close with a number of mom’s friends. And getting to know so many of her wonderful friends again, I have discovered something: People loved my mother. They loved her like they loved their own mother. And that love made people almost territorial about her. And by that I mean this- mom was so open, and so available for everyone that surrounded her- that one couldn’t help but feel as thought they were being let into her innermost sanctum.
Let me put it this way: What most of us reserve for family and our very best friends- mom gave away freely to everyone.
Whether you were a co worker, or a dinner guest, or an orphan on a holiday, or a recipient of one of her many jars of Peach on Earth, or whether you simply cut her hair- mom was REAL. With EVERYONE. And EVERYONE responded to her, and appreciated her and respected her. People listened to her.
I got another email from an old friend who was one of carter’s child hood best friends and she said “when I was a kid I remember thinking that your mom was the first woman that I knew people listen to like a man. I wanted to grow up and have people listen to me like that’”
And my god who didn’t? I was speaking with Missy last night and she said that in mom’s absence she has found herself thinking- What would Claudette do? And I realize I think the same thing too- What would mom do?
But I know she taught us. And so I rely on that- because everything I know is because of her.
My mother has been my north star- my point of reference- the way with which I navagate, and although she is gone – and her absence leaves an enormous presence… it is that presence with which I know find my way.
Because mom was force. She was funny, and naughty, and kind and disciplined. So disciplined. As most of you probably know, mom spent the last several years of her life on a diet. She was always so conscious of what she put in her body, and specifically she stayed away from sugar. Even though her nickname was Cupcake- cake was NOT something she indulged in.
Until about the last month of her life… I think she felt she was making up for last time because SHE WENT FOR IT. BIG TIME.
Everyday was a different delight. Rice pudding. Tapioca. Brownies. Cupcakes. Sheet cake. Tiramisu. Fudge. Cookies. Ice cream. Smoothies. Tofutti. Trips to the stone cold creamery.
One evening she announced that tomorrow she would be wanting a Coconut Cream Pie from Dupars in Hollywood. And I’m thinking –how the hell does she even know about such a thing? I mean, this is a woman who hasn’t had any sugar of any kind in YEARS. When I explained that we were going to be alone that following day and that it might be difficult for me to run to Hollywood. She replied simply- “Send someone”
Which of course I did: Nikky in fact- went and got the pie…. Thank you Nikky.
Course, I would have done anything for her. We all would have- that’s what made us a Team.
Mom led such an extraordinary life. She reinvented herself so many times. When others couldn’t see the potential in something- Mom did. She saw the good in everything, and in everyone. But more-than that: she brought the best out in everyone she touched.
I know for me- I was the best version of myself with her in these last few months. And as heart broken as I am- I am so grateful that I had these last few months with her, to be with my mom and to redefine our relationship.
She was the queen of the remodel. And I am honored to feel as though I may have been her final project. That we all were- her final remodel was to shape us all into the Team we always had the potential to be.
She taught us how to live BETTER, And how to BE BETTER, and in the end she even taught me how to die. With grace and dignity and class and style and lots and lots of Pie.
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
MEMORIAL PICTURES AND FINAL MISSIVE
Hello everyone,
Well.
Here stops the Team Carter Newsletter Train.
I want to thank all of you for all your support and love over these past months. I sit now and can't believe the year we've had. Even now in the deafening silence that is mom's loss, I am bewildered how all of this could have happened.
I took this past weekend to go out to New Jersey and visit with mom's sister Lois, her Dad Joe, and her Aunt Tina. Tina taught me her family recipe for fruit cake and the legendary "cuccidati" the all time supreme Italian cookie.
The leaves were so bright and full. Yellow, Red, Orange, Brown, Green. A magnificent spread from Mom's childhood hometown... It was an important trip for me.
I am writing to say this will be my last group newsletter.
I wont be filling your inbox anymore with my monthly updates. I will keep writing, and you are welcome to come and read about us and ours at anytime. As always, we can right here.
So if you need a fix, have a look. But you will have to come to us, as we will no longer be coming to you in a mass mailing form.
I also thought I would give you all the link to the photos we have from both memorials.
Basalt Memorial
LA Memorial
As far as Team Carter goes we will be with the Fosters for Thanksgiving in Basalt. And then we are off to Mexico for Christmas and then back to Basalt for the new year.... so we will keep busy this holiday season, and as far away from all the xmas madness as possible!
I want to thank you all for reading all these months. I may never be able to articulate the real loss I feel. I may spend the rest of my life writing and never really explaining. But I need you all to know, how much it has helped me to know that you were all reading. Both as a friend, a writer and a girl whose mother was dying in front of her- your support has been epic.
As much as I have kept all of you together as a unified front, reading, staying abreast- being apart of this journey- It is I that was kept together by these emails: Catharsis realized.
And so I want to say thank you. For reading, for supporting, and most of all for loving my mother. I remember everyday how magical she was... everyday a little more. And I am consistently in awe of the magic she held, and spread around her- in her life and in you: all of her friends. She held you close for a reason, and after these months I feel I may know why.
Cuz you all are amazing.
And so.
Thank you all for everything.
Much love always,
and, as always we will remain,
Team Carter
Well.
Here stops the Team Carter Newsletter Train.
I want to thank all of you for all your support and love over these past months. I sit now and can't believe the year we've had. Even now in the deafening silence that is mom's loss, I am bewildered how all of this could have happened.
I took this past weekend to go out to New Jersey and visit with mom's sister Lois, her Dad Joe, and her Aunt Tina. Tina taught me her family recipe for fruit cake and the legendary "cuccidati" the all time supreme Italian cookie.
The leaves were so bright and full. Yellow, Red, Orange, Brown, Green. A magnificent spread from Mom's childhood hometown... It was an important trip for me.
I am writing to say this will be my last group newsletter.
I wont be filling your inbox anymore with my monthly updates. I will keep writing, and you are welcome to come and read about us and ours at anytime. As always, we can right here.
So if you need a fix, have a look. But you will have to come to us, as we will no longer be coming to you in a mass mailing form.
I also thought I would give you all the link to the photos we have from both memorials.
Basalt Memorial
LA Memorial
As far as Team Carter goes we will be with the Fosters for Thanksgiving in Basalt. And then we are off to Mexico for Christmas and then back to Basalt for the new year.... so we will keep busy this holiday season, and as far away from all the xmas madness as possible!
I want to thank you all for reading all these months. I may never be able to articulate the real loss I feel. I may spend the rest of my life writing and never really explaining. But I need you all to know, how much it has helped me to know that you were all reading. Both as a friend, a writer and a girl whose mother was dying in front of her- your support has been epic.
As much as I have kept all of you together as a unified front, reading, staying abreast- being apart of this journey- It is I that was kept together by these emails: Catharsis realized.
And so I want to say thank you. For reading, for supporting, and most of all for loving my mother. I remember everyday how magical she was... everyday a little more. And I am consistently in awe of the magic she held, and spread around her- in her life and in you: all of her friends. She held you close for a reason, and after these months I feel I may know why.
Cuz you all are amazing.
And so.
Thank you all for everything.
Much love always,
and, as always we will remain,
Team Carter
Thursday, November 1, 2007
LA MEMORIAL FOR MOM
Hello everyone,
Well the time has finally come for us to hold our second and final memorial service for mom.
We will be holding the celebration this Saturday November Third at Eleven in the morning.
Dress code is california casual- which means if you are a suit and tie kinda guy go for it- if you are a jeans and blazer kinda guy thats fine too. Ladies, it is in a backyard so those itsy bitsy heals might drive you crazy, also it is up on a hill, and the sun can be pretty hot up there...
We plan to got to the Viceroy Santa Monica afterwards for drinks for those that are so inclined.
And that, is pretty much it.
I want to thank everyone who flew and drove and walked and otherwise made it to Colorado to be with us. It was such a special time and an beautiful service and we were all humbled by the turnout and extreme show of love and support.
I hope that this too will be a real celebration of a wonderful woman and a wonderful mother.
So much love and light to all.
See you Saturday, and if not we will have you in our hearts.
xo
Chase and the rest of the team.
Well the time has finally come for us to hold our second and final memorial service for mom.
We will be holding the celebration this Saturday November Third at Eleven in the morning.
Dress code is california casual- which means if you are a suit and tie kinda guy go for it- if you are a jeans and blazer kinda guy thats fine too. Ladies, it is in a backyard so those itsy bitsy heals might drive you crazy, also it is up on a hill, and the sun can be pretty hot up there...
We plan to got to the Viceroy Santa Monica afterwards for drinks for those that are so inclined.
And that, is pretty much it.
I want to thank everyone who flew and drove and walked and otherwise made it to Colorado to be with us. It was such a special time and an beautiful service and we were all humbled by the turnout and extreme show of love and support.
I hope that this too will be a real celebration of a wonderful woman and a wonderful mother.
So much love and light to all.
See you Saturday, and if not we will have you in our hearts.
xo
Chase and the rest of the team.
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