It's been one of those weeks where I
don't deserve really to have anything to write about. A refrigerator
that has malfunctioned since its purchase three years ago is replaced
with a shiny new model. Perry is neutered and when home from the
vet, jumps out of his crate, bounds and leaps through the house,
showing no sign of having been anesthetized. I leave a message for
the principal of the adult school, hoping to find out if I will begin
teaching when school begins in three weeks, but my message is not
returned.
Pat Smith, whose son was murdered at
Benghazi rails against Hillary at the convention. Smith's facts are
evaluated by Politifact and determined to be largely inaccurate. The
exploitation of this bereft and obviously unhinged mother is
sickening. I manage the duck hunter, the underwear model who avers
that Obama is a Muslim, and Stepford Tiffany but then can bear no
more. Even the fringe elements of the GOP never screamed to
imprison or even lynch the opposition. Who'd have thought that Ted
Cruz would actually come out looking sane and heroic?
I think the best response to the GOP
convention is to steal myself not to think about it. The other
thought I am trying to keep at bay is that Number One Son, has, sight
unseen, signed a one year lease for an apartment in Chicago. He is
resigning from an excellent job and in a few weeks will attach a
trailer to his tiny car and set out to make a new life in a city he's
never visited. My reservations have been politely listened to and,
unsurprisingly, ignored.
To fill the empty basement and satisfy
my preternatural maternal instincts I have applied to host a foreign
exchange student. I am offered a 13 year old Chinese boy but the
supervision of a child this young is more than I want to take on. It
is astounding to me that a child of this age is sent by himself to a
foreign land. Cultural roots are obviously in play here as I myself
am freaked out about my 23 year old heading off to live with a group
of friends in the Midwest. The agency is attempting to find an
older, less high maintenance student for our home.
Resigned to the inevitable I check out
job opportunities in Chicago. There is nothing listed that remotely
relates to the boy's interest in film. For young college graduates
the options seem to be retail clerk, food service worker or car
rental agent. He comes home from work now enthusiastic about
projects he's working on and celebrities he sees around the office.
But he also returns to the same room he's occupied since childhood,
in a city where even with a decent paying job, it's nearly impossible
to find an affordable rental.
I point out to him that I accept his
decision and despite my skepticism am being supportive, adding too
that I am also deeply depressed. He notes that he is sad too,
knowing how much he'll miss us. Interestingly enough, having
assiduously avoid any Jewish activity beyond our terse Friday Shabbat
prayers, he notices that he feels a connection with the Jewish
community and suggests that this is something he might pursue in
Chicago. His intention, he says, is that his children be raised no
less Jewish than he was. He adds too that, like us, as soon as the
Bar Mitzvah is over, he'll hightail it from the synagogue. The
candles are lit this week and I notice that Girlfriend-in-Law knows
the prayers and shyly sings along. Both agree that there will be
challah and candles in Chicago.
I think a lot about my mother these
days. During college I spent some time in London and some in Mexico
but otherwise I stayed nearby. Believing that my own children, for
the most part, truly enjoy spending time with me, I'm trying to
remember if there was a time that seeing my own mother was anything
other than an obligation. My problem is I cannot separate the
dementia, that I do not blame her for, from what in hindsight, I see
as some sort of untreated personality disorder, for which I find it
more difficult to forgive.
Before Spuds leaves I take both kids to
the Mercado De Los Angeles in Boyle Heights, the closest thing to a
bustling Mexican market that I know of. They eat muletas and drink
raspados. Spuds buys a Loteria game board to hang in his room. I
mention that I was here years ago with Grandma. They are surprised,
as their only memories of visits with their grandmother are that we
all dreaded them. I explain that there was a time when my mom was
adventurous and that she loved foreign food and travel. She was also
jealous and angry and that often eclipses for me that despite it all,
there were times of fun.
My sister's life exploded and she ended
up back home with my mother again and again. There was screaming and
drama and I was looked to constantly to act as referee. At one point
I dragged the two of them to a therapist I was seeing. The next time
I saw him on my own he was annoyed at me and asked, “What do you
think I could possibly do with them?” The implication that there
was a possibility that he could do something with me was reassuring.
But now, as I approach 60, I relate to the terrors about money and
health,. At the time Mom expressed being frightened it seemed overly
dramatic, paranoid, and conjured simply to induce my guilt. Now I
wake up myself in the middle of the night in a cold sweat, panicked
about death and destitution. My mother, wracked with worry, tromped
around a big house that she occupied, except for when my sister
crashed and burned, by herself for over 50 years. My circumstances
are indeed quite different. A partner sleeps beside me and I like to
believe that my children are less damaged and resentful than I was.
Still, I feel lousy about trivializing my mother's terror and angst.
Mom had beautiful nails which she
maintained meticulously. Even towards the end, when she was
completely ravaged, I made sure she was taken for a manicure. I'd
often arrive at the board and care to visit and find her gazing at
her hands. There is a sweet manicurist who has somehow gotten my own
brittle nails to grow a bit. For the first time in my life they look
decent. I like to admire them and catch myself examining my hands
again and again. I am like my mother, I'm sure, In many ways I don't
observe and also in ways I clearly see. When I extend my perfectly
manicured nails and examine them with satisfaction I feel connected
with my mom in a strange and potent way.
Shabbat will soon be different.
Perhaps it will be just Him and myself or maybe some befuddled
foreign student will join us at the table. This week after dinner
the four of us play Clue. I haven't played in years. I realize I
could likely win if I had a piece of paper to keep notes on. Number
One Son figures out that it's Colonel Mustard, in the conservatory
using the wrench. Then we have cherry pie.
I imagine I will continue to wake in
the night, afraid. Either a mildly corrupt professional politician
or a narcissistic sociopath will be our next president. There will be
a foreign student with us, or there won't be. I'll either teach
again, or I won't At least until Spuds graduates in May and, maybe
even after that and forever, my kids will be far away. Poignant
feelings wash over me when I catch myself staring at my hands. I am
my mother's daughter. I am my sons' mother. For all the ebb and the
flow, the stasis and the change, that will always be.
3 comments:
wow - so poignant and beautiful.
What a beautiful reflection on this moment in your life, Layne.
Leigh
Very beautifully written. I am haunted by this essay. Leo's moving on because his feet say "go" and he has to listen to that inner voice now. It will work out or it won't but he seems to have to have this experience ahead. He is from parents with very solid heads on their shoulders; he will figure out what to do and if not he will have the ability to ask for assistance and input. What you wrote about your Mom is quite powerful and there are similarities to my own Mom's personality too (and to the day she died she was also insistent about manis and pedis; I/we always made sure her hair was dyed and cut and her nails done with the latest polishes.) This is the "many forks in the road" juncture. I did that standard thing, whereby you pick fights and such so's to make the parting easier. You are psychically being pulled in many directions as a good mother. I too recall being yours Sons' age and just not understanding how casual I was being to my Parents about my move to NYC. Leo will miss you both more than he can fathom, I sure know that I did and that hit me like a brick within 1-2 days of arriving to NYC. I have to say being here made me appreciate my Folks more and we because closer after my move.
Post a Comment