Living proof at my fingertips
It was one of those conversations
that I'm tired of having, but I couldn't seem to stop
myself.
Mr. Trinkle and I were standing against the wall at
the Fox Theater
in Oakland, this
over-the-top restored venue from the late 1920s,
drinking our beers and waiting for the
group Echo and
the Bunnymen to come onstage. We'd already
had a lot of laughs that would be almost
impossible to explain here (for example, the image
of us wearing cucumber and cabbage outfits, just
to find our moment of glory in the truly
ridiculous [but very cool-sounding] Echo
song Thorn of
Crowns).
Without warning my dead son winnowed his way into
the conversation, which lead to talks of alternate
lives and then my father showed up, too,
unrepentant, demanding the old song and dance of
anger.
My father and stepmother visited us last month, which
was a truly wonderful visit, one for which I am
grateful. As a result of nerve damage in his back, he
is in constant pain and traveling is very difficult
on him, but they made the trip and we all had a good
time. There was just one ripple in the visit, one
that I tried to ignore, in a discussion that would
have been impossible without the blog. He
found writing to survive
over a year ago and
read through it in its entirety. Eventually he
apologized via email for any pain he had caused me,
which was the extent of our interaction on the topic.
During this most recent visit he asked "Are we ok?"
meaning, I suppose, "Is everything all right between
us?". Yes, I said, we were ok -- when he read the
blog I felt like he was listening to me. Did
he
feel like we were ok?
Well, sure, but he wanted me to know that, despite my
accusations to the contrary, he had tried. I had no idea what he was
talking about, but his response was probably to
this post,
where I write about my anger at my parents for doing
nothing when I desperately needed help:
"My mother
stopped parenting; my father never even started. They
deserve my compassion. It's no use getting angry at
those who don't see their own
worth."
It's a heavy accusation
and I stand by it. The truth hurts. We didn't dig any
deeper into that particular pit, but our discussion
bothered me, still does, and that was what I was talking about in the
lobby of the Fox Theater, that and imagining my
never-to-be-24-year-old son, dressed in skinny
tapered pants and an ironic t-shirt, angry at me for
my own form of neglect, of the fetal variety.
The band started. We hustled to our seats, suddenly
surrounded by the music that was a part of the
soundtrack of my mid-teens and I started to cry. I
sobbed through the first three songs while Mr.
Trinkle patted me reassuringly, probably feeling bad
about the tickets, which were a birthday present. The
music transported to a bleak time in my life, when
things started really getting bad and I was
indescribably
alone. I felt the
direness of my situation at fifteen and sixteen,
combined with the beauty of my current life. I am
forty years old, married to a good, supportive man.
We have a healthy, creative, wonderful child. My life
is in enveloped in love and warmth. How did I get so
undeservedly lucky?
Our conversation in the lobby -- the clinical look at
my father, the ghostly appearance of my son, my guilt
over that time of terrible fear and anger -- began to
make sense. No matter how much work I've done here on
revealing secrets, writing out my pain and anger,
trying to forgive my parents, I can't take the
experience of what happened in the Little House away.
Even thinking about the music we were about to hear
brought me to the edge of that past, to the isolation
and neglect. And my father's main reaction upon
reading this entire blog, apart from a generic,
though I'm sure heartfelt apology, was to tell me
that he tried. He has never acknowledged any direct
responsibility for (or curiosity about) that time. I
wish his acknowledgement didn't matter. Maybe someday
it won't.
I've put so much effort into trying to forgive the
unaware that I've forgotten to pay attention to my
own grief. I still carry around sadness for things
lost, for not mattering enough, for acknowledgment
that will never be. So I cried and cried until Ian
McCulloch started singing about vegetables. Mr.
Trinkle turned to me and raised his eyebrows. We
started to laugh.
I really am lucky.
Echo and the Bunnymen play "Silver" in Oakland,
courtesy of some fellow fan:
Image:
Living proof at my fingertips, or me and family at
Muir Woods, August 2009. Photo by my
mother.





