Our young travelers, after five days on
the road, reach Chicago. We receive photos from the UFO Museum,
Carlsbad Caverns and a shot of an Oklahoma steak the size of a mature
cow. After a week of fretting about the boy's tiny car, laden with
boxes and a giant roof bag, making it from here to there, I breathe a
colossal sigh of relief. Now if he can just get a job.
I spend all week converting the boys'
dungeon to a space appropriate for a nineteen year old Korean girl
who arrives Saturday. The boys from my office haul a big truckload of
stuff to the thrift store and it will be weeks until we manage to
dispose of all of the trash and recycling left behind. The room,
finally, looks quite nice. While I am fascistic about coaster use
upstairs, I realize that the attitude in the basement area has been
more cavalier. I strategically cover stains with doilies and place
mats. I notice too that there is a burn hole in a sheet purchased
recently but waive prosecution.
Clearing out their room has me
conflicted. I am happy now that the space is clean and attractive.
It is hard though to think about the extent to which this change completely
displaces our kids. Their accretion of things seems extraordinary.
After contending with huge cartons my mother's yellowing steno pads
and forty year old dermatological samples, I've been pretty diligent
about getting rid of my own possessions which are no longer beautiful
and/or useful. I started doing this way before that Japanese book
came out. I struggle to impart this philosophy to other family
members. I am impressed however that when Number One Son is informed
that everything left at our house has to fit in a small cupboard he
effectively prioritizes and selects objects for cupboard or car and
jettisons the rest.
I think I'd already had children when I
finally got the last of my crap out of my mother's house. It seemed
that it shouldn't be a problem given that it was a huge house,
occupied by a single person. Mom pestered me constantly about taking
my boxes but I ignored her. I resented that she was trying to get rid
of me. My rationale was that she never would have ended up with the
house after the divorce if it hadn't been for me, the kid, so I felt
entitled. I hope that I never expressed this sentiment to her aloud,
but I probably did. Now that all that remains of my kids'
belongings is out of sight, in a small closet, I realize how
complicated and fraught the homes and artifacts of childhood are.
When I went out on my own my mother
gave me some furnishings. I don't remember exactly what. Years
after we'd split up I went to visit an ex-boyfriend in San Francisco
and noticed he had one of my mother's tablecloths. I'm not sure why
I even wanted it, but I took from Mom a hideous early American
rocking chair that she'd allegedly rocked me in when I was an infant.
It got left at a house in Crestline that we sort of got evicted
from. Even though I'd considered the ugly rocker a gift, Mom was
devastated that it was gone. I think she may have actually wept. I
had other stuff on my mind and probably screamed at her about her
pettiness and the fucking rocker. After seeing how my own kids
thrashed stuff that has sentimental value for me, I understand now
how she felt.
What I've learned is that it's not just
my kids who don't care about stuff. Most kids are pigs. So was I. It is sad to realize how they'd trashed or discarded things we
paid for using money that we earned. Our twenty-three year old is
now on a weening schedule and the timer is ticking on car insurance,
cell phone and gas card. I suspect that when he's a completely free
agent he will better value and care for the things he buys with his
own dough.
Part of me longs for the bunk-bedded
childhood room with Rugrats, DragonballZ and Pokemon. I remember the
days when most problems could be resolved with a hug and a kiss.
But, when I discover that Spuds has written his name large in Sharpie, on a perfectly nice birch closet, I snap out of my nostalgic reverie.
I miss them powerfully but I also enjoy the absence of their mess and
stuff and feel bad about leaving my own crap in my mom's rumpus room
for decades. I feel guilty about trivializing my mom's concerns when
I get more of a sense of what it's like for a kid to grow up and
away. The older I get, the more like her I become in many ways. Still, my mom
attached too much importance to possessions, perhaps as a substitute
for satisfying relationships with people.
I am pleased that Number One Son and
Girlfriend-in-law stay in touch during their cross country journey.
Spuds however has been rather incommunicado. He knows however that
when I text him “Yo!” that he'd better get in touch. It turns out
he's been distracted as his girlfriend has returned to Tivoli. He is making
her hummus. I'm relieved that he's fine and imagine what the kitchen
that I spent days scrubbing is going to look like when he finishes
making the hummus. “I love you,” I text him before I turn in for
the night. I wake to a message in the morning, “I love you more.”
And things kept, and things cast away, and their now frilly bedroom,
seem inconsequential.
1 comment:
Very sensitively and beautifully written. Nothing can be done about Leo and his friends' belief that the job they want is waiting for them. We all, at that age, thought the same. He is more confident and centered and solid than most are at his age though, with very solid references already. That is more rare at his age. He's a lot more mature and centered than I was at his age.
Your story about your Mom and possessions made me remember I once insensitively got rid of a doll my Mom had in a room that had cobwebs and 2" of dust on it. She never looked at it. I started to declutter the room of such things, it was hurting my Virgo sensibilities. She too had a very emotional reaction, the doll had been given to her by her best friend, who had died in the decade before. Taught me a lesson.
The young lady arriving is a lucky individual. Love, R
Post a Comment