Youth and All Her Follies

I’ve been on somewhat of a nostalgia kick recently. My Instagram feed is full of all these clips from Halo releases and someone posted (again) that video of kids from a 2000s year at high school, where it was a camcorder, not a phone.

I think I missed a bit of that being a kid stuff, but the bits I got to have are pretty solid bits. Whether it’s swimming in a pool with my best friend while it’s raining out, driving to Rally’s (pre-vegetarian days) after school to grab a burger (before burgers were 12 dollars), watching my brother play video games on our small TV while our mom taught piano lessons. That last one is probably one of the best ones.

One of the things I always looked forward to when I was smaller was the yearly trek to Peoria, Illinois for family reunions. I never spoke to the people I saw there except at those reunions. My great-grandmother’s children decided to hold these reunions once everyone started spreading out. There were 9 children total, 8 survived to adulthood, my grandma was the baby.

My great-grandmother had all of her children by the time she turned 44. I’m turning 37 this year and while I don’t have 9 children, I wonder if my great-grandmother would understand the pride I’m building in myself. For staying even when I want to leap into the void. For continuing onward, with a dogged determination to prove the bastards in my brain wrong, that I am worthy of being here.

Life was a different kind of challenging for her, especially as the mother of so many children. Things known as an instinct now were being discovered when she was a teenager. She saw two world wars while trying to raise her family. She had sons fight in the second, two of whom were in some of the bloodiest battles. I can’t even pretend to know what that kind of fear feels like.

The point of this whole thing is to say Labor Day weekend is when the reunion always takes place. I’m still on the email list (something not around in Martha’s time) so I know when and where it’s happening, but after my grandmother died, I couldn’t bring myself to keep going. It was different without her. Not quite empty, because there were familiar faces, but more of a dissonance. A chiming of bells that didn’t ring together.

It’s always a time of reflection for me on Labor Day. Now that I’m in a job that gives me the day off, it’s easier to look back at what being young was for me. Young and full of whatever propelled me onward, ready to bolt toward the future of uncertainties and unknowns.

I don’t know what Martha would think of me. I’m only just now starting to shift my own thoughts of myself. But I like to think that whatever exists in the space between life and death, if there is such a space, Martha finds me funny, endearing, and full of the hope that carried her through her toughest times. I’m probably a bit too raunchy for her, but I feel like she’d have a secret smile for me when no one else is looking.

I hope you’re doing well, friends.

Until next time.

How Are Birds Even Real?

Note: This is a piece written in three parts in response to my mother’s near-fatal car accident in November 2024. It is my honesty as bare as it can be and while I had trepidation posting this piece, I am trying not to be ruled by my fear that she’ll have a damaged reputation after posting it. I’m tired of being responsible for holding the truth of how me and my siblings grew up. I guess I hope leaving it here makes some of the exhaustion go away.

11/14/2024 – Written at my mother’s hospital bedside

What does it say about how I grew up that all three of my mother’s children have been subconsciously preparing to get a phone call from a stranger saying she’s died in an accident she caused?

How do I describe—even a little—the fear that bolted through me when I heard the woman who stopped to help say they could hear the sirens?

Sometimes I am so tired of being my mother’s mother. My mother’s main source of any kind of human contact. It is excruciating to be the one fielding calls and asking questions of people in medical attire. Telling well-wishers, “thank you for stopping by” when I want to tell them to leave because she won’t shut up until they do and she has a broken sternum.

I want her to lie still and be quiet for once. Let silence help her heal, but I think the quiet terrifies her. She needs sound so she isn’t alone.

She’s lying down as much as she can and I see her pulse in the thin skin of her neck. Her eyes are closed and every now and then her nostrils flare as some kind of pain passes over her, and she fights back tears.

This woman gave me life and I am livid she is so careless with hers.

Birds have hollow bones. I remember thinking when I was a kid that was impossible because bones are full of marrow and such a vital part of being complete. Structure and stability in a consistency not seen in my life otherwise.

My mother keeps thanking me and my sister for being here. She’s telling everyone I told my boss I wouldn’t be in the rest of the week, but really I told her it was just today.

Is this a glimpse of what it’ll be like in ten years when I’m the closest and the time comes for real? Am I selfish for being angry my life has to be halted so I can help her restructure hers?

She broke her back.

She broke her sternum.

Her seatbelt cut slices into her hips and she has bruises purpling her stomach. She can’t walk because her left foot is twice the size it usually is. Her right hand has a gash across her knuckles and it has yet to be stitched up.

She had a morbid sense of pride when she announced there was a puddle of blood that morning from where the staples held her skin together.

Do birds have skin on their wings? Or is it just feathers? I bet they have skin. They have to, right? Follicles for the feathers to protrude and spines to remain.

She’s eating her sandwich and talking again. She slept for about twenty minutes. There is an emptiness in my whole body and my anger is rearing.

We are so fragile and easily shattered.

My mother is enjoying being taken care of, which everyone eventually does, but watching her direct my sister and talk to the nurses opens up a part of me I thought healed.

Am I a bad daughter for being so bitter?

I want to weep.

I want to go home.

I want to stop feeling so angry.

How do birds know where to go? How do they know the movement of their wings will beat enough to lift them into the air? Do they tuck their feet automatically? Press their tiny talons into the softness of their feathers as they soar?

Her hand is bleeding again. She’s making jokes. We briefly talked of the events last night, and I want her to feel guilty. Feel even a twitch of remorse for never listening when we tell her to pay attention while driving.

Does this make me horrible? Does this mean I’m not a good kid?

I hate myself in a way I didn’t know I could.

My brother says he thinks I’m just tired.

I’m about to combust.

The After

I haven’t spoken to my mother since Thanksgiving. She messaged me for Christmas, and I didn’t respond. How can I be so callous to a woman who just had a serious, almost fatal car accident?

Because she smiled when we told her we were afraid.

It was a micro expression she’d deny ever making, but I’ve seen it my whole life. A flash of satisfaction that she’s somehow won.

I can still hear the way she tried to breathe when she called me that night. The way her voice sucked at the air she couldn’t catch.

She told my cousin I wigged out because a stranger called me to tell me what happened. She laughed when she said it.

I wake up reaching for my phone thinking it’s ringing and it’s that woman again. She was so frustrated with me because I didn’t know what to do. I think her name was Nicole. I wish I could find out how to thank her for stopping.

And apologize to her because I thought my mom was dying and I wasn’t ready for it. 

The ER people were very kind to me when I walked in. I know I looked terrified. My hands were shaking, and I had them stuffed in my pockets. A chaplain brought me back to a less crowded waiting area, and told me what they were doing for my mom.

I couldn’t sit. Had she fallen asleep at the wheel like she has countless other times? Why was that my first thought? The chaplain returned and asked me if I wanted water. I laughed and said no, thanks, because I laugh when I’m scared.

The fear isn’t so big, then.

My stepmom returned my panicked call and asked me if I wanted her to come to the hospital and sit with me. I couldn’t speak, so she answered for me and said she was on her way.

The manager came by and told me they were doing some x-rays and other tests. The chaplain returned and gave me a smile. He was a beautiful young man, and I think I fell in love with him for that night because of his kindness. Everyone kept asking if I wanted to go see my mom, but I said I was waiting for my sister to get there.

If my mom was dying, I couldn’t do it by myself.

My sister arrived and we went to see my mom. I cannot put into words how dead she looked. Her eyes opened and she smiled, and said some random things because she was on heavy painkillers.

The towels they’d used to soak up her blood were on the floor. Her hand was covered in a bandage drenched with iodine, and the gown she wore was spotted with pinkish brown.

I have seen the inside of my mother’s skin. I have seen the way her layers were shorn apart by her seatbelt and I see it when I close my eyes.

I condensed my brain into a speck so I could fix her life.

I texted her piano students, called her insurance company, called her physical therapy, called so many places. I spoke to the men from her church because she wanted a blessing.

People visited her daily. She told the story in the same inflection to everyone who would listen.

“There were no lights! I would have slowed down if there had been lights!”

She hit the other driver’s trailer full of wood at 55 mph. There is no more front end to her car. I went to the tow yard to take pictures for her insurance company.

The insurance company she’d been with for a week.

The tow yard wouldn’t move her car from where they’d parked it, so I bruised my arms and legs getting into it, sandwiched between two (far less damaged) vehicles. I knelt on the rain-soaked, bloodstained seats trying to recover the items she wanted. I cut my fingers on the glass blown across those seats like sand.

It was when she smiled at my fear, I understood: I would never be what I wanted to be for my mother. It wasn’t the decades of mental, emotional, and sometimes physical abuse. She didn’t hit me all the time, so it wasn’t bad. It wasn’t when she told me with the strongest conviction that the church she belongs to was more important to her than her children. It wasn’t even when she closed my arm in the car window when I was trying to breathe during a panic attack because she was swerving while driving.

It was her satisfaction that she owned my terror. I was afraid for her.

She is a master at manipulation. She is so good at making you feel like you’re worthless, that you don’t even know she’s the one doing it. I have cried in the deepest depths of my depression in her lap. I have asked her to make it stop hurting because I don’t want to leave, I want to stay and figure it out. She drank it in like my pain sustained her and she could use it when I didn’t do what she wanted.

She threw my demons at me when I wouldn’t help her immediately. “I’ve done this for you. You can’t help me with one small thing?”

Deflated.

Ransacked.

Gutted.

I never wanted to be better than her. It wasn’t about seeking her approval, but being enough as I am. Being allowed to stop reaching for some bar she’s tossed to the highest peak and laughs as she kicks my feet out from under me.

I want to ask her how she ever got joy out of owning a broken thing. If seeing me wither whenever I gave in to whatever she demanded of me when I was already stretched to impossible limits was really that big of a high.

I remember thinking when I was younger how birds are stupid things. Their tiny brains and their flappy wings. The Canadian geese that pooped everywhere were just taking up space. Terrorizing small children.

I was a bird.

I read about Icarus. How he flew too close to the sun and plummeted to the ocean. He was stupid, too. Be happy with what you have, I thought. What you have is what you deserve.

But what if Icarus laughed as he fell? I read somewhere that maybe he did, and I haven’t been able to see birds the same since. Why would a boy who could fly choose to stay on the ground when the sky is infinite?

I am a bird.

The Now

The psychological torment I went through as a child is why I will never fully trust another person. If my own mother derived joy from torturing and owning her children, how can I look at anyone else and believe they won’t do the same? I tell people, “you are valued because of who you are, not because what you give me.”

And I believe that with the entirety of my being.

There are some who have taken advantage of my desire to make sure no one else feels the way I do. Some who have used my emptiness of self to try and add me to their collection of misery. But I refuse to let myself be lost forever.

I accept that there are moments of uncertainty, that there are times where I cry over my sink as I wash my dishes because I miss my mom. I will not tell myself I’m dumb for crying. I will not tell myself I’m fine, when I am very much the opposite.

There is so much I wish I could be angry about in regard to my childhood. It’s not anger I feel, though. It’s sadness. It’s grief for the kid I never got to be. Sure, I had moments of being a kid, but it was always tempered with “what’s going to happen when I get home? What kind of mood is Mom in today? What have I done to upset her? I can fix it, whatever it is.”

Ten-year-olds are not meant to fix their damaged mothers. I forgive the parts of her that are broken, but I do not forget the way she used those to destroy me.

Mud Puddles

Effulgent is the face of a four-year-old as she steps into the standing water in her side yard. Her father has already told her twice not to do so, but the stick in the center needed saving. As did the leaves. Sodden socks removed and replaced with dry ones, rubber rain boots exchanged for the baby crocs she wore at first.

She is invincible.

With a smile back at those watching her, she sweeps her feet into the water, soaking instantly the dry socks, her tiny jeans, and part of her jacket.

The leaves are safe now, though.

She sits off to the side, near the fence she’s almost as tall as, and she removes her boots one at a time, dumping out the water. Entirely too pleased with her results, she stands back up and begins again. Once more filling her boots so that when she takes a single step out of the muddy water, it squirts from her boot and she looks over at the cackle I’ve made.

It truly is a sight I don’t think I can put in words properly. My niece is my favorite person on this earth and she will never know just how much she’s taught me. The small things that seem so instant, so demanding of my time are absolutely not of any importance when one must dance like the LED ballerinas on her videos. Or become a horse so she can direct me around the living room, but never on the kitchen tile because my knees are no longer as young as I think I am.

Her radiant and pure joy as I get out of my car, her little bounces because she can’t wait to run to me and tell me all about what she has planned for my visit, there are no actual words for the peace it fills me with.

I had not been well. In fact, I’d been too close to the side of me that wants to cut the losses and go. So close I had to take time off of work to find my way back to myself. My true self, not the one broken and hanging on by a mere thread of a root at the precipice of a cliff. The one buried alive under a hill of dirt clods, dry and yet still clumped enough to be in the way. Each attempt to dig out meant effort I couldn’t find. The light I’d found kept becoming reburied and I’d have to rest.

I talked to my brother one night, right at the beginning of understanding I was not, in fact, okay. And at one point, I stood beside him as he sat in his desk chair and he held me the tightest he’s ever held me and let me cry on top of his head because I didn’t have the words to say how scared I was. How uncertain of anything I was.

But he knew. He knew the way he knows what his daughter needs before she knows she needs it.

I am no longer stuck in the mud like a four-year-old’s boot as she tries to maneuver her way out without falling. I am sweeping my feet through the puddle, the joy on my heart is effervescent and I am ahead of where I was when I started sliding into despair.

Mud puddles are not places to get stuck. They are places to save leaves and prod with sticks and see the way the dirt swirls as it saturates.

There will be other sad times. For now, I am turning my face toward the sun, feeling the warmth on my skin as though for the first time, and I am okay.

Until next time, friends.

32

Today I turn 32. It’s such an odd feeling. I’ve not been a fan of my birthday for a very long time, but I’m trying to change that. Every year I visit a state park where I live and spend some time in nature to remind myself the world is bigger than what keeps me up at night. My favorite time of year is fall. I love the colors of the earth, the rain (although it’s not particularly pleasant to hike in), the cool mornings and evenings, the holidays. I love getting to spend time with my family especially around my birthday. They keep me grounded and remind me it’s okay to be here. It’s more than okay.

I’m not sure what all I want to say today. I get to see my niece, which is something I’ve been looking forward to for a while. I get to spend time with my brother, and when she’s done working, my sister-in-law. Their house is one of my favorite places to be. It re-centers me and recharges my social battery, even if we just sit around and watch Goose entertain herself.

I think sometimes we put too much pressure on ourselves to be more than what we are, and while that sounds a bit . . . harsh? It’s enough to be who you are for the people who matter to you. I don’t know. I feel like I’m being rather vague and somewhat “self-help” book today, but it’s more just trying to figure out where I fit into it all. I really don’t need much to be content, and I think that’s something I’m going to keep striving for, contentment. Happiness is impossible to maintain, but keeping up with contentedness is far more achievable. I’m going to go make some tea, maybe hot chocolate, I don’t know, and then I’m going to get ready to go see the babiest baby who ever babied.

Be kind to yourself. You are worth it.