“Surviving a loss and letting go is only
half of the story. The other half is the secret belief that we will find, in
one form or another, what we have lost. And it is that potential, shimmery as a
star on a clear night that helps us survive.” – Veronica Chambers
“You can’t make pancakes without breaking
eggs.” – Spanish proverb
My
father’s birthday is Christmas day. He has been dead for almost 26
years, yet he would still only be 79 years old. Cheated, him and me and
my children, and theirs. Dead at 53.
And
cheated too because he was born on Christmas Day. Imagine the cheaty cheat
you’d feel if your birthday fell on Christmas, especially as a kid—whatever
happened to that other day, the one mid-year, where everyone gets together to
sing “Happy Birthday” and play Pin the Tail on the Donkey and eat double
chocolate layer cake with small sugar trains on top and shower you with gifts
and focus on you alone, celebrating the very fact that you were born into the
world?
For
him, it was all compressed into one relative-heavy day—nothing to look forward
to in March or June or August—no, just this one day, his own birth overshadowed
by another and, as time went by, overshadowed even more by a large red-suited
man with rosacea.
Oh,
sure, people would say they had combined your Christmas and birthday present to
accommodate both occasions, but I can’t imagine that this convenient
fabrication made Daddy feel any better, more special, less cheated.
So,
as an adult with a family of his own making, we celebrated Daddy’s birthday at
Christmas breakfast—specifically focused on his birthday and marred only
slightly, I imagine, by the fact that he had to compete for our divided
attention—after all, the loot from Santa was achingly just in the next room (my
good lord, man, there’s a General Electric Show ‘n Tell Home Entertainment
Center Film Strip Viewer and Record Player waiting for me under that tree!)—and
perhaps marred also by the fact that he had to cook it himself. Or maybe he wanted
to, always having been known as the best breakfast cooker in the house: grits
and bacon, sausage and biscuits with sausage gravy, scrambled eggs, pancakes in
the shape of animals or letter with Aunt Jemima syrup. [This was before my
stubborn descent into vegetarianism as a teenager.]
I
loved those pancakes. No, I adored them. I loved the attention they
represented, the personalized creation of batter and fluff, perfectly creating
a P and a D in his hand and sometimes a flower or a heart or triceratops or the
word “love.”
Grandma
would join us, white-gloved to assess the dust; we would put an extra leaf in
the table and fold our paper napkins into pointy triangles instead of
rectangles, to be fancy. I always thought of it as cozy and realize now that it
was actually tight, a table in the small kitchen since we had no dining room,
room for only one person to stand and refill juice glasses. Probably my
mother dreamed of a house for entertaining the Lottie Moon Women’s Bible Study
Group; what she got was a house for raising orange-haired children, giving us
the biggest room in the house as a playroom complete with a schoolroom-sized
chalkboard for my work as a pretend teacher and eating, instead, at a table
pushed up against the kitchen wall. Never mind that the living room sat unused,
ripe for space but untouched by human hands, save when the preacher visited.
So,
Daddy cooked and we ate, giving him birthday presents at breakfast, wrapped—and
this is important—in birthday wrapping paper, not holiday wrap. This couldn’t
appear a haphazard, forgotten day, lost in the thrill of that Oscar Schmidt
Autoharp and new Bobby Sherman album left by Santa, no.
One
of those last birthday (of course, we didn’t know how few he had left), I saved
all my tips from working at Joe’s Dairy Bar and bought him a Mickey Mouse
watch. Mind you, the crowds at Joe’s on Sunday nights after church were
amazingly large (no lactose intolerance among the Southern Baptist crowd), but
cheap, so it took a while to save enough for the special edition Mickey Mouse
watch with the date on the dial! Imagine! I thought it suited his pixie sense of humor, that crooked smile of his,
and he did love it!
When he died, I made sure Mr. Sossoman arranged it on the wrist on top so all those hundreds of people who came to see him in his satin puffy
box would smile and nod knowingly. “Yes,” they’d say to themselves, “that
Melvin always did have a smile on his face.” The funny, bright red “Merry Xmas”
Western bow-tie that he proudly wore with a sly smile to holiday parties is
always front and center on my Christmas tree.
That
same birthday, I talked Mama into buying Daddy a pair of Lee blue jeans. She
balked—“what will people think?”—and I insisted. “He’ll love them. Just wait
and see,” I said.
He
wore them everyday. He had them on that last harried ride to Intensive Care on
Mother’s Day weekend, the unsigned Mother’s Day card we found afterwards in the trunk of his car a
most terrible symbol of his suddenly unfinished life and his thoughtfulness, simultaneously.
Daddy went into the hospital
that day and only his clothes came back out. I used to see Mama open that hospital
bag of his last clothes, closing its top around the whole bottom half of her face, trying to smell him, desperate for his scent after he
went underground. I tried to convince her to bury him in those loved, worn
jeans and his beloved red plaid corduroy shirt, but she drew the line at the
Mickey Mouse watch. A woman knows her limits. I wear that shirt now and perhaps Mama
still has those jeans in that bag, taking them out from time to
time for a whiff of him, real or imagined.
Daddy
hooked a holiday stocking shortly before he died, having been introduced to the
wonders of rug-hooking by a wife who was frantic—desperate even, and with good reason—to provide him
with a quiet hobby, one that unlike watching Joe Namath wouldn’t involve
excitement, anticipation, movement, stress to his heart. If ever there was a
hobby like that, I suppose rug-hooking was it, followed only by sleeping.
So,
when Christmas comes, like it inevitably does, my sadness at his leaving
magnifies: when I see that holiday stocking hung from my dining room mantel, I
both smile at his leaving it behind and I weep for the reduction of his life it
represents, a heart patient quietly hooking rugs at the very prime of his life.
And
yet, I wonder how much my adoration depends on his loss. If he had been living
these 25 years, would I have seen things about him as an adult that I didn’t
like and he, me? Probably, just as we all do. So, instead, he has been given a
special status—that kind of adored position where time stops so we can’t peek
under the curtain and see things with which we disagree as often occurs when we
age, watching parents and relatives and friends (and self) too closely over
time become people we might not want them to be, or be ourselves.
None
of us are immune from that disappointment, that change of heart, that
realization, that sudden knowing, are we? Perhaps not, unless we die young.
It’s not a good trade-off, and it’s a chance I long to have taken, to grow up
with him, warts and all. Maybe then I would have learned to incorporate all
that new data, that vision of family from grown-up angles, where Grandpa is no
longer nine feet tall, but just usual-sized, for example. Perhaps then I would
have learned to be forgiving of those foibles, that fall, that shrinkage in
estimation—that human reality, the stuff that really is us over time—to resist those impeachment proceedings of others
that we’re prone to. As Deming said, “the
greatest losses are unknown and unknowable.” Here’s to knowing.
When
my stepfather died 23 years after my father, this time I was ready. He asked me
to write his eulogy and deliver it at his funeral and I did all that. It was a
fine eulogy, I think, one with a satisfying organizing principle, a rhythm to
it like all good speeches, a clarifying sense of closure and rounded-ness. I
wrote it on a flight beside a Baptist minister; perhaps his denomination was
the final inspiration. Writing it had haunted me during those 37 days while he
died—knowing I needed to get on with it, yet feeling bad about announcing the
end while he was still in process, knowing that summing up a life is an awesome responsibility, but not yet feeling the sense of it, the way it should add up, until that
flight. And then it was done. I had realized the parts and the whole. It was a
fine tribute, a tripartite homage to the life of a tall man with a Southern
accent, a golfer’s tan, and a dark green Lincoln Town Car.
Delivering
that eulogy was tough going. Tougher than I ever imagined. In fact, spent by the
anxiety of watching me choke on words, one of my mother’s friends said
afterwards that she didn’t know how I made it through. “I had to take a Xanax
just to get to the funeral,” she explained. Later, at Mama’s house, my brother
pulled out a pill bottle, asking if anyone needed an Ativan. (Note to self:
after always hiding the occasional wine bottle when my Southern Baptist family came to
visit, I suddenly realized that perhaps they don’t drink not because of their religion, but because they’re all high on
prescription drugs, so just a shout out to them: no more hiding the Mt
Difficulty merlot at my house.)
As
I looked out from my pulpit into the church, I saw the sons of my father’s
friends, looking just as their fathers had looked 25 years before; their daddies
then pallbearers for my father’s casket—the one like Hoss from Bonanza was
buried in—and now here before me their sons, spitting images and pallbearers
again. In that hot-faced moment of recognition, I wasn’t speaking at my
stepfather’s funeral anymore, I was speaking at Daddy’s, saying what I needed
to have said then, but was too young to know or say. I'll admit that I got momentarily angry at all those people who had continued living while he didn't, including the dead man lying below where I stood. And in that circular moment, I
could barely speak; there were moments of real anguish on the part of the
congregation (and me), that kind where you feel deeply for the person trying,
desperately, to go on, like I felt when Richard Gaylord choked on “God Bless
America” that time at the Burke County Fair. There’s a tape of the eulogy; I’ve
not been able to listen to it since.
There,
there in the front row was the reincarnation of one of my father’s friends—his
son, Kenneth, all grown up into him now, the very mirror of his dad. And
Ronnie, further back, always true and faithful and representing his recently dead father,
having become him. It was suddenly still 1980, that horrible May moment when I
reached out like a child to touch Daddy’s casket as he was rolled out of the church, those
young 50-ish men in the church for Daddy’s funeral, feeling his loss but even
more so, their own sudden vulnerability.
My
father’s death at 53 in 1980 is the fulcrum around which my life moves. Or
perhaps that’s not exactly it. Perhaps it is a rivet on which things hinge,
that holds things together. No, a grommet through which everything else is
laced? Yes, since that would imply a hole, I think that’s it. Like Fermat’s
last theorem, it will take me 375 years to work it through. I suppose we all
have something like that to puzzle through, fill up, patch, lace shut.
Journalist
Marjorie Williams died of liver cancer last January three days after turning
47. A writer for The Washington Post, Vanity Fair and Slate magazines,
as an “act of mourning,” her husband compiled essays of hers in a book entitled
The Woman at the Washington Zoo:
“Having found myself faced
with that old bull-session question (What would you do if you found out you had
a year to live?), I learned that a woman with children has the privilege or
duty of bypassing the existential. What you do, if you have little kids, is
lead as normal a life as possible, only with more pancakes.”
Pancakes
made into initials—is there any breakfast food more glorious, more personal,
more full of sheer, fantastic, lasting love?
Yes,
it’s clear what I need to do: I need to buy myself a Mickey Mouse watch.
~*~ 37days: Do it Now
Challenge ~*~
Find what you have lost.
Cook
monogrammed pancakes for people you love. Wear comfy jeans and a plaid shirt
and a goofy watch that makes you (and others) smile. Celebrate your birthday
whenever you get a hankering to.
Hook a rug to leave behind.
Wonderful writing, as usual, Patti.
I have this vision that you must spend time crafting this weekly piece. Time akin to preparing the pancakes. Monday - to the store for the ingredients (or maybe the inspiration just pops up). Tuesday - put the dry mix together and sift well. Wednesday - for the fresh eggs and milk. Thursday - the skillet is greased and warmed on the stove. Friday - the dry and wet ingredients fold together and set for just a bit. Saturday - the skillet is ready, the batter is spooned out into wonderful shapes and served up. No additional sweetener is required. The chocolate chips inside just starting to melt is sufficient sweetness.
I, probably not alone amongst your readers, come here for a fulfilling breakfast and leave quite satisfied, yet anxious about having to wait another week for more pancakes.
Keep'em coming!
Posted by: Steve Sherlock | 26 December 2005 at 10:27
I've read and re-read this post and as I know I will read it again at least a thousand more times, I have decided that I can't NOT comment.
My parents were killed in a car accident 5 years ago and ...
Well, your words resonate so deeply within me that my knees shake. Somehow you give me permission to continue to celebrate them, to mourn them, to miss them. This, despite the people in my life urging me to move on. On their birthdays everyone goes quiet when I mention it's their special day. I have since had children and we celebrate my mum's birthday as Grannie Day. They get presents that she would want them to have and we jump in the autumn leaves and eat cake and blow up balloons and I spend the day giving them rides on my back, acting as a camel as she would have...
I don't know what I want to say. Forgive me. I think maybe THANK YOU will have to do.
Thank you.
Posted by: Mary-Sue | 07 January 2006 at 01:08
Who knows how I ended up here, reading through tears another mortal's anguish at being broken loose, too soon, always too soon. We are rooted in our fathers. They are bigger than life itself, and even as we reach, and pass, their age, we can see that it was our tiny eyes, too young and too small, no matter our age, to see the flaws, the clay and feet now not so distinguishable. Ms. Digh, you do honor to his memory. The beauty of the word, enscribed, digitized, is that it lives and nourishes, sons and daughters, near and afar, globally and temporally. For what it is worth, Thank You.
Posted by: Roy | 12 May 2008 at 20:59
Awesome. I am less formal with my son's pancakes. He is handicapped and one of his and my fave birthday 'things' is his annual Birthday pancakes.
http://babystepscottage.blogspot.com/2009/07/not-perfect-but-happy.html
Posted by: Chez-cottage cheap | 16 August 2009 at 09:56
I am reading this at the end of the summer of 2009, and I can't even get up to shut the office door because I'm crying so hard, albeit silently. My own father died the very day you wrote this about your Daddy - Christmas Eve, 2005 - at the cheaty age of 61. Instead of monogrammed pancakes, he and I invented a sandwich together and I still have one of his quilted corduroy work shirts in the back of my closet. For her part, my mother kept their old answering machine because it's the only recording we have of his voice. I didn't ask what she put in his casket, but I'm hoping that it included the get-well card my daughter made for him that he never got to bring home from the cardiac unit.
Posted by: Stacey | 01 September 2009 at 15:48