Monday, December 18, 2017

Journal Entry -- December 2017

The troubling times in our country and the world have overshadowed my year. I share a collective undercurrent of low-level depression with many people. I am horrified with what is happening! Sometimes I try to get involved and actively participate in ways I feel I can make a difference. Other times I stop reading or listening to the news or talking with people altogether so I can separate from it entirely.

The paradigm shift we are undergoing feels enormous. What it actually means is beyond comprehension. On a personal level I am surprised to be able to sustain any equilibrium at all. The only ways I’ve found to maintain sanity and serenity is playing music and meditating on gratitude. During this time when everything is unraveling with changes and turmoil, my way toward a better state of being is by appreciating what is life giving.

Even with all the bombardment to the psyche, I try to keep an optimistic frame of mind. I find hope in small ways. I go to the mountains and take walks in nature. In my storytelling group I have been incredibly inspired to write. (A story of mine was recently published in an anthology compiled by our library!) Music fills me with tremendous joy—playing, teaching and composing. (For those interested, my 2017 CD will be completed early next year) “Taj my dog” is wholeheartedly loving and endlessly entertaining. Mask making continues to tickle my imagination. Skyping with my grandchildren (Amelia 6 and Finn 4) delights me. Mostly though, I enjoy and cherish friendships and marvel at the encouragement, love and caring we share.

I sincerely wish for us endurance, balance and peace of mind and spirit in the coming year.

Monday, October 30, 2017

Robert


On the second Monday of every month at 7 in the evening I find myself wondering, “Who is Robert?” At my very first 4-H meeting when I turned 8, Debbie’s Mom, the adult leader, explained all about Robert and his Rules of Order. I drew the conclusion right then and there that Robert must have influenced everything about celebrating the 4 “H’s”—head, heart, hands and health. My awe of him flourished, endowing 4-H with an elevated otherworldly mystique bordering on a religious experience. In time I even concocted an entire epic about Robert’s magical powers. He was my hero and assisted 4-H in sweeping me up and being my refuge.

My big brother, this year’s club President, hits the wooden gavel on the desk and calls the meeting to order. First we cross our hearts with our right hands and pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. Then we pledge our lives to the 4-H flag. The flags are about 4 inches long and stand side by side in a plastic base that is the color of metal. When they are ceremonially unfurled each month I can actually feel that I am standing taller than usual.

Do you see what I mean about the power of mystery?  The rituals, undoubtedly created by Robert and his rules, mesmerize me. It is kinda like being at church only without God and Jesus and the Holy Ghost. It’s not that they aren’t here, too. They are. It’s just that this club is about having fun and making stuff and square dancing and cooking and sewing and collecting bugs and raising vegetables and farm animals.

The Victory 4-H Club makes my heart sing, that’s for sure. It is the only place in my life where I feel I belong hook line and sinker. When I am doing something that has to do with 4-H, I feel like I am part of a community. Isn’t it odd that I live in such a small town but feel like an outsider? I may have taken on my mother’s attitude about the people who live here. She seems to almost dislike the farmers who come into the lumberyard. And among the folks who live in town, there are only a few she really trusts. Of course, she is always nice to everyone—and I don’t think they even know how she really feels. But I know. It is obvious we feel they are different from us. That makes me feel lonely and sad and afraid to admit because it means when I want to get close to people, Mom will discourage me with a few words and a glance.

When I go to a 4-H activity, however, it is like I am dropped off at the front door of heaven and set free. I can be a friend with any of them. We are all part of the same club, and even though they are the very same kids who Mom dislikes when we’re not doing 4-H activities, here it is okay to belong. I am certain Robert must have had a part in giving me this place to connect with people. I just love being part of something greater than myself and my family.

Tonight, our “order of business” is to decide on the float we are going to make for the county fair parade. Mom has been brainstorming ideas and designing floats with pencil on thin paper. The idea I like sounds like it might be the hardest to make. She asks my dad if he can make an 8-foot sphere frame and cover it with chicken wire. Then, the Saturday and Sunday before the parade, us kids would stuff the chicken wire with napkins. It’s supposed to look like the flowers used in making the floats for the rose bowl parade.

We will create the world in just one day. The continents will be green, because that is the 4-H color and the oceans will be white because that is the color of all the napkins. The sides of the lumberyard’s flat bed truck will say; “4-H Builds A Friendly World”. I like the idea a lot, even though it sounds like it is going to need a lot of help from parents and all of us kids working hard to make it happen.  A motion is made and seconded and in an instant it has been decided that this is the float we are going to make. I join the others in shouting out my “yes!”

As the next order of business is brought up I let my mind wander and my eyes fall on the adults who are sitting at the back of the room. They are not only parents but are also leaders of different 4-H activities. I really love when a small group of us goes to one of their homes. There is something about the adult attention at these times I don’t get anywhere else in my life. When they share what they love, I can really feel it. When they encourage me with their inspiring stories and relate to me individually—it feels like the whole world has fallen completely away and there is nothing left but that activity leader and I.

Take Mrs. McGuire, for instance. Last week I went to her farm just outside of town out by the cemetery to learn to make vegetable soup. First, the six of us girls put on the bibbed aprons and were given little paring knives. We were assigned a vegetable to cut up to put into the soup. I got okra. Since my mother hates okra I’d never tried it. I understood why as soon as I made the first chop. The insides were slimy and stringy. I was completely grossed out and wanted to go home. I felt envious of Gwen Griffing’s carrots that she was turning into perfect flat round disks and the green beans Debbie Stallard was happily snapping in her fingers. When the soup was done, it tasted delicious and did not, due to my instance, include okra.

My Auntie Lou is the sewing leader. She has “the patience of Job with those kids” everyone says. I don’t have any idea who Job is, but I love Auntie Lou, even though I don’t like sewing. I did feel like a grown up, though, when she taught me to thread the sewing machine by myself. You would never guess how her shinny black Singer with fancy gold letters comes right out of the top of a wooden cabinet that looks like a table. As many times as I’ve been to her house I never imagined her sewing machine was tucked away like that!

Mrs. Griffing is my favorite activity leader. I am crazy about how she can just have fun and play. She feels like she’s one of us kids. No matter what we do with her, it’s delightful and enchanting. She really takes Robert’s magic to a whole new level and shares it with us until we squeal. Her real job is teaching junior high reading and English. But her true calling is being a 4-H leader. At least that’s what I think. I especially love it when she gets us square dancing. She makes dos e does and al-a-my lefts feel like we’ve been doing them all our lives. I don’t even mind wearing a short red-checked skirt or touching hands with boys.                                                                                                              

My dad is in back of the room, too, with the other parents. He is the gardening leader. I can’t believe he has fallen asleep during the meeting. I guess the way it’s run, with all the rules about having only one person getting recognized to talk at a time, makes it quiet enough for Dad to sleep. I am embarrassed and don’t want the other kids turning turn around and seeing him. And, I hope he doesn’t start snoring!

I don’t think he does a very good job as the gardening leader. He is too forceful about the making certain you do everything the “right way”. You don’t feel any love or magic when he talks at you about gardening. I saw him one night when he was alone in the garden. He didn’t know I was behind the garage. He was talking sweetly to his tomatoes, so I know he really does understand vegetables. I learned all about loving them from my Grandma. I wish Dad would help the other kids awaken to the wonder of gardening and flowers and vegetables. I wish he would tune into Robert’s wisdom a little. He only seems able to show his gruff side. I think he’s cranky and uncomfortable when he has to be around children.

Sylvia Hartwich is a sophisticated and stylish woman. She fascinates me for 2 reasons. First, she is the only person in our town who has ever gotten divorced. And secondly, Sylvia is one of the people my mother trusts. She is preparing us for the fashion show at the fair. This is the first year I have done this so I don’t yet know how uncomfortable I am going to be in front of a bleacher full of people watching as I stop and turn left and then turn right and pause to pose with one foot at a slight angle behind the other. Mrs. Hartwich’s quiet warmth and my curiosity about her makes pushing through this useless activity seem worthwhile.

Several of the things I am interested in don’t have leaders. That doesn’t stop me from setting out on my own. For interior decorating I decide to redo my parents bedroom. I pick the paint color and spend an afternoon carefully painting—the way dad has taught me. He is so finicky about painting he almost sounded angry when he showed me how.

The biggest concern he has about painting is cleaning the brush when you’re done so you can’t even tell it’s been used. I take this very seriously when I am finished for the day and pour what I think is turpentine generously over my hands and brush. To my surprise and horror I have picked up furniture stripper that is in the identical colored can as the turpentine. The thick sticky chemicals burn and hurt my hands a lot. Running water over them only makes it worse. I am home alone, so I run as fast as I can all the way to the lumberyard for help. My dad grabs some turpentine and soon the furniture stripper is off my hands. I think what I did scared him so I overlook his scolding. I am just glad the burning stopped.

There are no adults in our 4-H club who know anything about bugs other than killing them when they bite or poisoning them when they get on the crops. I had never heard the word “entomology”. I didn’t even associate the word with the cases of insects stuck through the heart with silver straight pins that hang in my brother’s room. He had researched and then perfected the process and sometime, I can’t remember when, he taught me how to mount bugs and butterflies. I am a little surprised, as sensitive as I am about animals including bugs that I can kill them in a smelly Ball canning jar and hurt them with pins after they are dead. I guess my brother must have done a good job demonstrating how to put your feelings aside when doing entomology.

I hear A.C. Griffing move to take a break from the meeting for refreshments. Curtis McGuire seconds it. This means it is time to eat sweets and drink a bottle of pop. I’ve been thinking about this moment all day. I choose my pop, which is in a glass bottle buried among others in a large metal cooler filled with ice in the back of the room. Then I wait in line for Mr. Berges to wrench off the metal cap of my Orange Crush with a church key. I take an enormous swig, anticipating that the thick sweet orange liquid will explode in my mouth. Instead, my taste buds are inundated by a putrid, moldy, disgusting taste so awful I spontaneously spit it out, even though we are inside the building. My dad appears immediately out of nowhere and grabs the bottle away from me. He thinks I am trying to act like a smart aleck. When I tell him what happened and we look inside the bottle, there are cigarettes floating at the bottom like dead fish before they come to the surface. He tries to make it seem like it’s is not a big deal, discourages me from talking about it, quietly gets me another bottle of pop and leaves me with the other kids.  But, Orange Crush is never the same for me after that.

Soon it is time to adjourn the meeting. The flags and their base are slipped back into the box and the gavel taps 2 times--signaling the meeting is officially over. I am spinning inside with a sugar high from the pop and cupcakes and am invigorated by the experience of belonging. The room is swirling and it feels like I am inside a snow globe. People are gathering their belongings and getting ready to go home.  Parents are talking with one another while their children run amuck. Some boys are chasing each other with their thumbs over the end of their pop bottles, shaking them as they run.

I sit in the back of the Chrysler between my brother and sister on the way home. The next thing I remember is being woken up so I can walk into our house and go to bed. In that in-between time of sleeping and being nearly awake, I am so full of happiness and gratitude I think I might explode. Before I slip into bed I thank Robert for everything he brings me at the Victory 4-H Club. I am looking forward to stuffing that huge globe of the world with napkins and I can’t wait for next month’s meeting. I’ve decided I'm going to choose Grapette.


Saturday, September 30, 2017

The Ride

My legs are barely long enough to climb the gigantic steps. I can see metal railings above me but there is no way I can reach them. When I finally get to the top I see the floor is covered with black rubber. Dirt and mud are scattered all around. I should know. I don’t take my eyes off it.

Mommy has forgotten she has to take my brother to a violin lesson on the other side of town at the very same time I have dance lessons. At the last minute she makes the split second decision to put my sister and I on the bus to make sure we don’t miss our classes. She parks the car around the corner from a metal pole that has a blue sign with a picture of a bus on it. As we walk toward the pole she gives my sister quick instructions: “Get on the next bus that comes by. Give the driver this money, pick a seat and sit down. You know what Mrs. Thomas’s street looks like, so when you see it, tell the bus driver and they will stop and let you off. Then you can walk to your lessons.”

When she drives away I burst into tears. Why is she leaving us here? Never in my life have I felt so many things all at once. My impulse is to run after her, but I can’t see the car anymore. She is gone. Will I ever see my mommy again? I look up at my big sister (16 months older than me), searching for support. When I see her eyes I get even more scared. The usual sparkle is gone and it feels as though she isn’t there.

Now, I am on an enormous bus looking at the floor. I stand behind my sister as close as I can. All I want is to disappear into her. I have never been able to poof myself away from scary situations but thinking about it helps slow my heart down. It is beating so loudly I am sure everyone can hear it.

My head feels fuzzy and I am so dizzy I am having a hard time keeping my eyes focused on the floor. How am I supposed to know when you don’t breathe you get light headed? I can feel my sister’s back is stiff and I draw closer trying to find safety in the grey squares of her plaid wool coat.

A thought comes into my mind, “I hope my sister knows what to do.” Then I realize, “There is no way she can know. Neither of us has ever ridden on a bus before!” We live in a sleepy little town an hour away. It doesn’t have stoplights or even a stop sign. The only buses are the orange ones that pick up the farm kids and bring them to and from school. Our town is so small I know everybody. The few I don’t know—know who I am. “You’re Alice and Howard’s kid, right?” or “You’re one of Phil Cosandier’s grandchildren, I’ll bet.”

It is a very safe place. No one locks their doors. I am allowed to roam around by myself as long as I check in once in awhile. Not one of the 800 people who live there is a stranger. That is important because the one thing Mommy always says over and over and over every Saturday when we go to Topeka is, “Never, never, never talk to strangers, no matter what”.

I peek at the man sitting behind the steering wheel. He is wearing a brown uniform with brown gloves without fingertips and a brown hat. I can’t read what it says on his hat because my glance in his direction is too fleeting and his head is facing forward. Plus, I am just learning to read and it is kind of a long word.

I can’t help noticing his skin. It is much darker than the kids who lifeguard at the swimming pool after being outside all summer. This scares me because I have never seen anyone with skin like this before. Is he sick? What kind of sick would make your skin turn black? All I am certain of is that he must be one of those strangers Mommy has talked about. We are helplessly paralyzed in front of him. He looks at us as though he has never seen two little pale girls before. I wonder from his sad look if he thinks we have some terrible disease?

People are trying to pass behind me and one man carelessly bumps into me—pushing me right against my sister. She turns around to give me a dirty look and I can see tears on her cheeks. I don’t want her to be crying. I need her to be strong and keep me safe! Spontaneously big tears spring from my eyes again. I don’t like crying. My sister always makes fun of me when I cry and tells me I am a baby. Now, look at us! I am afraid of what will happen if people see us crying, so I put my head down and pretend to be interested in the floor again.

The dark man sticks out his hand and takes the paper money my sister is clutching. He reaches behind his seat and pulls out a small beige canvas bag. He stuffs the money into the bag and takes out four silver coins. He drops three of them into a metal box beside him that goes clear to the floor and then he hands my sister the fourth coin. She grasps onto that coin until her knuckles are white, as if her life depends upon it.

I am still looking at the floor, tracing the patterns the dirt makes on the black mat with my eyes. Suddenly I feel my sister move away from me. That is when I realize I am holding my breath because I want to hold it now but I already am.

Just then the bus lurches forward and my sister pulls me into a cold, cracked black vinyl bench seat next to her. I think I can feel the other people staring at us so I keep still and look straight ahead. Every block or two the bus stops and some people get off and others get on. I try to calm myself by watching the trees speed by. I have no idea where we are. The trees all look the same.

We sit and sit as people come and go. Pretty soon the dark man stops the bus. All the other people have gotten off and the only ones left are my sister and I and the dark man. He stands up and when he comes back and towers over us I am certain he is a giant. “Where you girls goin’?” he asks in the deepest voice I have ever heard. I wait, willing my sister to answer. “I don’t know,” she whispers. “Do you have an address where you’re goin’?” I realize he is trying to help. “No” she says a little louder but with a quiver in her voice. “Where is your mommy?” he asks. “I don’t know”... my sister’s voice trails away.

He turns and sits back down on his seat. He pulls his sleeve back and looks at his wristwatch. I can see his dark face in the mirror and think he looks concerned. He drives around the block and pulls back onto the main street where he begins stopping the bus and letting people on and off again. The only thing that calms me is counting the trees as they zoom past.

Then I hear my sister clear her throat and say to the dark man, “This is the street we want.” He slows down and moves the bus over toward the curb. Then the heavy metal door folds itself in two and I sit on the dirty black rubber floor on the top step and scoot down the steps on my behind as fast as I can.

I follow my sister across the street. Lots of cars from both directions stop and let us cross. She walks ahead of me on the sidewalk and I have to practically run to keep up with her. When I see Dorothy Thomas’s little green house with the faded red door on the side that goes down to her dance studio I start crying again.


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Our mother is sitting in the car in front of the house. I run to her. I want so much for her to pick me up, hold me close and never put me down. Instead she doesn’t get out of the car, doesn’t look at us and doesn’t say a word. I can feel in that loud, long silence she is upset. My sister and I quickly pile in the back seat. All I remember before falling asleep is how happy I am to be safe and how quiet it is in the car compared to that big old bus.

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Lost

In every story he ever heard about his mother she was referred to as “Libby”. He clung to her name with the desperation of a hungry puppy latched to a tit. So when I was born a voice rose up inside him and he pleaded with my mother to call me “Libby”. “Libby Lou Smith”. My mother flatly said, “NO!” expressing her willingness to call me Elizabeth instead. “That was her given name, after all”, she explained. He would not give up his small child’s view. His mother had always been called “Libby” and nothing my mother could say would change that in his mind. In the end, my mother won out as usual but compromised by giving me the middle name of the woman who had supposedly taken my father in. Her name was Elaine. So, Paula Elaine Smith was the name I was given before the tw0 week’s stay in the hospital was over and I went home.

History has to do with the past. Facts pull into view aspects of an event outside of ourselves so we can remember. Memory brings the past into the present so we can grapple with the internal experience. Memory can be affected by all kinds of things: age, emotional awareness, perception, life events, and imagination, to name a few. Memories are akin to making up stories. That is why our memories often change from one telling to the next. Sometimes they become filled with magical thinking—and those are the times that the memories can become fantastical stories that have very little or nothing to do with what actually happened.

So, consider the story my father remembers being told about his mother. Libby is heating up water on the woodstove. She is a 32 year old, strikingly attractive farmwife living in Iowa. The sun is high up in the blue cloudless sky. Her husband, Will, is out on the land planting alfalfa. Her 2 older sons, 4 and 6, are playing outside near the house. She looks out the window and smiles as she watches her husband on the tractor making a large circle at the end of the row. Her 6-month-old baby lies in a basket kicking his feet wildly with joy. She is heating water to give him a bath. Suddenly, a flame catches her dress on fire. She cannot put it out, cannot get out of the dress because the flames are moving too quickly. Her blood-curdling screams bring Will running. He rolls her frantically in a worn carpet and the flames finally smolder out. For the next 2 weeks Libby suffers excruciating pain in their tiny farmhouse before she dies.


Libby’s story seems to end here. But, what happened to her family? Was the baby (my father) passed around from one good neighbor to the next family member to the next church lady? What happened to Will and the 2 other boys? To compensate for being too little to remember, as he got older he alleged to have been taken in and given a wonderful home with his mother’s sister, Elaine and her husband, Otis.

When he was 5, his memory kicks in and he is living with his father and brothers in a tent with a dirt floor in Kansas City. The next memory that he occasionally shared is factual. He is attending the University of Kansas on a football scholarship during the Depression, going to school and football practice during the day and working as a janitor in various buildings on campus at night.

Did his higher education and marriage to my mother, a woman from a very different social class, provoke a separation with his father and brothers? I do not remember his ever talking about them, nor did I meet any of them. Their complete absence was such an integral part of my life, it never occurred to me to ask about them.

What was it like for him to lose his mother in such a horrific way at a young age, his father and brothers as a young adult? How did these events influence his sense of Self? Did setting him loose on his life journey, like a baby floating aimlessly in a basket, eclipse entire parts of his psyche? These are questions that come up for me when I try to make meaning of my memories of the man I called “Dad”.

My mother occasionally told a story about Dad. When I would hear this story, it emoted the feelings and the image I had of my dad in most of my memories of him. They had just met at the University of Kansas and my father called her up and asked her out. She was a popular girl on campus and not lacking for boys’ attentions. She declined. He insisted, saying it was necessary that she come downstairs from her dorm room immediately. She reluctantly acquiesced. When she rounded the corner and started out the door—she saw him standing there with 2 ice cream cones.

I cannot for the life of me comprehend why my mother married my father. He was a constant source of irritation and embarrassment to her, his family and our community. She did an excellent job covering up for his inadequacies and kept him isolated from herself, my brother and sister and me. During the short time after my mother died and before he remarried, I spent a little time alone with him. I was shocked with his shortcomings and inadequacies that were painfully obvious and uncomfortable to be around. 

To me, he felt like a little child. Not childlike exactly, but powerless. He did not possess the power adults’ carry. Consequently, he was the one all the other adults in my world blamed for everything. Everyone in the family projected something negative onto him. I could feel these projections when I was young but could not sort them out or separate them from my actual experience. Negativity therefore became the foundation of how I thought about him.

In my memory he desperately wanted a family. Not his own family with Mom and us kids—but he yearned for parents and siblings. So he looked to my grandparents devotedly and could not wait for the next family gathering to visit for hours with my aunts and uncles. They made fun of him behind his back, in front of me. I started to believe that if he was such a loser as they implied, then perhaps I was, as well. This thought kept me isolated in silence and despair.

Sentimental is how I would describe him. Along with having a sentimental emotional streak running just below the surface he was also sentimental about things he saw. He could tell you in great detail and with deep emotion about a hay bale he had seen decades before. I often wondered if this sentimentality left his unprotected heart vulnerable to other people taking advantage of him?

When I was little I thought he was intelligent and clever. I watched as people at my grandpa’s lumberyard waited in long lines out the front door for him to figure up what materials they needed for their projects. For not having any formal training, he naturally demonstrated tremendous creativity and talent. You’d think this would have brought him some positive recognition. But, like everything my father did, this backfired, too.

Working for his father-in-law brought him in close contact with a parent, which he coveted, while making it necessary for him to turn his back to the abuse that was being heaped upon him. When he did something my grandfather didn’t like, Grandpa would complain about him to my mother. Her anger would build throughout the day and into the evening until after we went to bed. Then, she let Dad have it with both barrels. “How could you be so stupid? Why did you tell Chester Kolterman the least expensive way to fix his window? Why did you order so many tubes of caulk?” The yelling seemed to go on for hours. My memories about this are muddled, as I was certain the verbal abuse was being directed at me.

When I was 4 (and loved my father with all my heart), my mother, after one of her tirades, loaded us up in the car and announced we were leaving and never coming back. When we started out, I looked back at the house and Dad was sitting on the porch steps with my dog. I was hysterical the entire 3 hours drive to Kansas City. I could not stop crying. Eventually mom said, “ Because you won’t stop crying we are going back”. Then I cried all the way home with the weight of this responsibility. When we pulled in the driveway, there he was, still sitting in the same place on the stairs, dog in his lap.

Our trust was broken during the only years I remember actually loving him. I was 5 and desperately wanted to spend time with him. One day he came home for lunch and asked me if I would like to go to the grocery store with him. I was ecstatic! We went to the store and picked up bologna and a can of chicken noodle soup, my personal favorites. On the way home we stopped at the old hospital. He bodily carried me inside and waited in the hall while Dr. Fleckenstein gave me a booster shot. I remember feeling the sizzling anger of betrayal for the first time in my life. I knew I would never trust him again. My feelings of loving him never resurfaced after that incident.

All through my growing up years he let other people think for him and did whatever they said. For instance, he was told to polish our shoes for church on Saturday nights, which he did religiously. His job was also to sort through the lima beans whenever he was told. More humiliating for everyone was when he was told by my mother to say something that was hard for her to say or do something that was difficult. He was oblivious to so much of my day-to-day life that when my mother sent him in to deliver a message, he would surprise me every time with his unhinged rage. At those times he was a loose cannon and even more dangerous because he hadn’t stopped to consider what he was doing.

When I got my first period and told my sister, he burst into my room, threw sanitary pads on the bed, then turned around and left without saying a word. Another time he slapped me in the face in front of my high school girlfriends because I was getting ready to go to the Queen of Courts Dance with them for an hour. By not questioning ‘why’ he was well suited to be able to do my mother’s frenetic dirty work.

He was physically incredibly strong and athletic. Much to everyone’s aversion though, he frightened us by sensationalizing physical wounding. Working at the lumberyard carried with it many possibilities for getting hurt. When this would happen he would describe in gory details exactly what had transpired and insist, with pressuring force, to look at his injuries. This sensationalism was also especially bullying when he cut up fish. He seemed to get a real thrill out of terrorizing us with blood and guts.

I often wonder what it would have been like for me if Libby had lived? Without the horrible wounding would Dad have had confidence to think and make choices for himself? Would he have been able to say to my mother, “Stop it, Alice, you are scaring the children”? Would he have protected and supported his children—been engaged in our lives? Would he have dealt with people differently and directly so that our relationship could have been spared his displaced anger?

Toward the end of his life I realized my father had never had any idea who I was. He had been around when I was growing up but absent from my life. It felt like he had never been interested in me and didn’t even like me. I could sense his anger at the opportunities my mother provided and he completely ignored all my creative and academic endeavors. From my earliest memory of him I could sense his disappointment in me. 

I don’t think about my father much anymore. Some of my memories have worn away like sandpaper rubbed smooth, others with colors faded from overexposure. But when I do occasionally bring them out I begrudge the fact that they are not tender and loving. Some part of me wants to remember him as a gentle person with a big heart. I want to see him in my mind’s eye with his love of people and his vast curiosity about life. I want to celebrate his creativity, his strength, his love of the land and animals. I want to savor his enjoyment of his tomatoes and vegetables. I want to experience again the special bond he had with my son. I want to feel compassion for him and form a picture with all these things in it. But, I cannot.



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If the role of fathers is to show you about the world, then I was shown how to give myself up for others, to have no boundaries, have no respect for myself and to allow others to abuse me. My deepest memories of my father are all about being repeatedly disappointed. Continually embarrassed. This was my experience. It is part of my story.