The Visit

May 25, 2007

I got the call that my oldest brother was in the hospital and quite ill. He’s been there for a few weeks. The family was uncertain if I’d want to know, given the history between my brother and me.

I can’t fault them.

I was driving home when I got the call and learned he was at a local hospital, which just happened to be on my route home. Without thinking, I exited the highway and headed towards the hospital.  My mind was blank, except for one thought, was I really going to do this? I didn’t know for sure until I was at the hospital inquiring about his room if I was going to actually see him. Even as I rode the elevator to the floor he was on, I wasn’t sure if I could actually go in. It wasn’t until I was at his room that I knew for sure I was going to go in. Even then, after I opened the door, I hesitated.

The curtain was drawn around his bed, but I could hear his voice as he talked to his wife. I paused, breathing deeply, and then walked purposefully into the room. I peered around the curtain and said, “Hello?”  The first thing I saw was my brother – older, more frail, less hair – and then I saw his wife. Both looked at me and froze. A second or two passed and still shock had both of them locked in its grasp. I said nothing at first but finally then, “I heard you were sick. I came to visit.”

The spell was broken and my brother began struggling to get out of his chair. Tubes protruded from his gown, and as he unsteadily tried to get to his swollen feet, he awkwardly pushed the tubes out of his way. I went to his side and grabbed his arm to help him, scared at how frail he seemed. His hand reached out and grabbed my arm to steady himself, and he kinda half fell into my body. I reached with my other arm around him, once again to steady him. Then he was hugging me, his body shaking as tears fell from his eyes. His embrace was strong and sure, contrasting the fraility I sensed.

“You look like dad,” I said. He continued crying.  ”It’s okay,” I said to him, or maybe more to myself. I don’t know.

I was there. To visit. It was enough.


A History of Mon-Mon, Part 2

April 4, 2007

Recently, two local (to my area) teenagers were charged with murdering a parent. You can read about the story here. The local community and the extended family are in shock over this tragedy, especially given the behavior of the deceased’s daughter in the weeks after the murder.  While I certainly don’t condone what happened to this mom, I think I have insight into how it may have occurred. Many of you are familiar with the death of my parents. Those of you who know me personally also know that I did not exactly have a traditional upbringing once my parent’s passed away.

 

My memories of my teenage years are not happy ones, and I rarely talk about those times. My legal guardian during this time was my eldest brother, and I believe that he did want to do right by me. But he was mentally ill and addicted to drugs. My past is filled with memories of drug abuse, abandonment by him at times and obsession from him at others.

I can remember wanting him desperately to disappear during those times. I longed to come home from school one afternoon and find him gone, never to return. I can also remember sitting by the window of one place or another, waiting desperately for him to return after days and days of not coming home. No one can ever imagine what I went through during those times – hating him but needing him, as he was my guardian and the only adult figure in my life at that time. There wasn’t another adult family member who wanted to take care of me and I was painfully aware of this fact.

Because I am strong, I did manage to escape my guardian the summer before I turned 15, though he remained my legal guardian until I was 18. And despite my bad times, there were – there still are – many other wonderful, supportive people in my life who loved me and showed me in their own way how valuable I was during those dark times.

When I was 25 years old and long away from his tyrannical obsession, my eldest brother told me that he often sat in our living room with his gun in hand, contemplating killing me while I slept in the next room. Then he thought about turning the gun on himself. Chilling, indeed.  But his confession did not surprise me. I was often awake myself those same nights, and I also thought about his gun. I thought of killing him and freeing myself from the misery and pain of our mutual existence. I dreamt of a world without him in it, and it was many years before I could forgive myself for those thoughts.

There are some wounds that never heal. Not even with time. Not even with all the love in the world.

So even though this story is sad, and the path these two kids chose is hard to understand – I find myself relating somewhat to these kids.  Most days you would never know that I came from such an existence. Most days I am the happy, well-adjusted adult you’ve come to know, appreciate, and adore (you know you do.) Sometimes I let those closest to me take a peek at those turbulent times, and if you ever hear a story from that time, then you must be someone I’ve really let in.


A History of Mon-Mon

June 22, 2006

June 22, 1986 was a very defining day in the history that is Mon-Mon. Twenty years ago my parents were killed in a car accident. I’ve tried to write something, anything in memory of the people they were and yet I draw a blank. One would think I could fill these pages with how much I miss them, how sad I am of all the events and people they’ve missed, and yet not one darn thing comes out.

Every year this day comes, and it feels like every other day. Therein lies the silent agony. Because with each day that comes, the same sense of loss and grief is present. It never really strengthens or lessens from day to day. It’s a sense I’ve come to recognize as a constant companion, like a lover you wake up to every morning always confident he or she will be right by your side.

I’m always amazed at how uncomfortable a loss like mine makes people – even for people who have known me for years. And so I rarely share this day with anyone, because I don’t like to make folks uncomfortable. So beyond the yearly call I get from my sister-in-law, in which I try to reminisce with her about people I can only barely recall, I am alone with my thoughts and sadness on this day.  I do remember my parents, but it is with the eyes of a 13 year-old. I was not a very enlightened 13 year-old either. It never dawned on me to take stock of who my parents were at that time. I was always more concerned with the cute boy in my class.

My mother called me from her trip the night before the accident. I will forever remember that she did so, since she called to say she loved me – a final, blessed gift I treasure more than anything I received before or since.  I will also forever remember the call that came through that Sunday morning twenty years ago mostly because I answered the phone. The adult voice on the other end asked to speak to another adult, and I casually told him my folks were due back from a road trip that very morning. I will forever remember the sound of anguish in my brother’s voice once he heard the news his “Oh, god no. Don’t tell me that,” will forever ring in my ears. As will the look on his face as he told me, “It’s just you and me now, Monica,” as I realized what the call meant. I will forever recall the tears I shed that entire morning and afternoon, until I was too numb to do anything at all.

But the specifics about my parents – that I cannot share on these pages. I can’t tell you what my mother’s favorite color was, nor can I tell you how my dad liked his coffee. I can’t tell you the story on how my folks met, nor can I share what they thought when each of their children were born. I can’t even tell you what shoe size my mom wore or if my dad liked to wear loafers. I just don’t know.

I can tell you that my parents were well loved by everyone they knew. They seemed to provide the support and stability within their own family structure, because when they died, that family structure crumbled like a house built out of deck of cards. Slowly over the years, it’s built back up. But the blow of my parents’ death was felt for quite a long time.

Especially to a 13 year-old girl, who went from the youngest and cherished child to an orphan in the span of seconds it took for my father’s car to drift across the center lane into the oncoming path of a van filled with a vacationing family from California. I think often of the impact of the two cars – the destructive violence that must have occurred at that moment. Just as often, I wonder if there was a deafening silence once the impact was over. How quiet it must have been as two people who shaped my world up until that moment passed from this earthly plane of existence.

And yet here I am.

Still able to breathe and live and love and grieve. That accident shaped the person who sits here typing these words that you read. All the pain, loss, sorrow – I suppose they made me stronger. Or so they tell me. I am a survivor. A title that always filled me with dread, but one I reluctantly carry because… well… it’s who I am.

We are all survivors in a way. So I will take this moment to share a silence with my fellow survivors and remember those who passed away.

And I will grieve still.


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