I was just doing a bit of research on Thanksgiving to satisfy my curiosity. Historians say that it was first celebrated by the pilgrims in Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1621 or 1623. (Though some say that the Spanish first celebrated Thanksgiving in what is now called Saint Augustine, Florida, in 1565! Or even in 1598 in Texas. I don't doubt this--our so-called American history doesn't give as much credit for settling our country to the Spanish as it should. But that's another story for another day.)
Originally, Thanksgiving was probably a New England Calvinist (Puritan) celebration or a religious holiday. Then as it evolved, it also became a secular or nonreligious holiday. In an attempt to unite the states (who were all celebrating Thanksgiving on different days) during a tragic time in our history, in 1863, Abraham Lincoln declared it a national holiday to be celebrated on the last Thursday in November. Then after another rough time for our country, in 1941 FDR changed it to the fourth Thursday of the month, reasoning that an earlier celebration of the holiday would give the country an economic boost.
By the way, those who celebrate birthdays in the last week or two of November--like my granddaughter Livvy Lara, whose b-day is November 26--may find that from year to year,Thanksgiving may occur before or after their b-day. For example, last year 2012 Livvy was born on the Monday after Thanksgiving, but this year 2013, we celebrated her first birthday on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving! Interesting.
Anyway, I really only began this blog post with the intention of wishing each of you--my blog readers--a good holiday and to name a few things for which I am grateful.
1. I am grateful for retirement. I have finally realized that it is "the gift of time."
2. I am thankful for the tangy smell of oranges in my kitchen this morning as I made fresh cranberry-orange sauce for dinner tomorrow. Not being someone who enjoys cooking, I am also happy that that is all I have to make for Thanksgiving dinner this year!
3. I will be grateful if the wind chill dies down tomorrow morning so that we can take our traditional morning Thanksgiving walk at Radnor. We like to walk for miles with family and friends.
4. I am thankful that I can still walk for miles!
5. I am grateful for my daughter Ellen and son-in-law Nekos and for their health and happiness.
6. I am thankful for my two little granddaughters, Tessa at 3 and Livvy at 1. Grateful that they live so near me that I get to keep them over night every week.
7. I am grateful that I get to keep the girls weekly so that their mother can get her freelance writing done. (Ellen is a professional writer, and she's always trying to carve out time to get her work done. If you need some writing done, I suggest you contact her at http://www.linkedin.com/in/ellenmallernee. She's an amazingly talented writer--no kidding!)
8. I am thankful that Ellen gets to stay home with the girls. I know that in some ways, it would be easier for her to go to work outside the home, but I think that someone needs to be home for the children.
9. I am grateful for food, shelter, clothing, and fuel (for the house and car)--the "essentials" of this life for me and for my family.
10. I am also thankful to have running water and a working hot water heater.
11. I am grateful to have a working refrigerator, stove, washer, and dryer. My stove is over 35 years old, and my refrigerator is over 28 years old so I thank them everyday that they still work!
12. I am thankful for my blog and its readers. I like to write, and I like to teach. I think that my blog is one of those places that fulfills those needs in me. Thank you to my readers.
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Friday, November 22, 2013
The Writing Life: “If a star at any time may tell us: Now.”--Howard Nemerov
Just before sunrise, Kathryn awoke with a sense of decisiveness. She stretched her whole body and her fingers and toes, rotating the wrists and ankles as she had been taught to do in yoga class. Turning her head from side to side, she took her time to gather her wits and to transition into morning wakefulness.
Stepping into her fleece lined slippers, she wrapped her soft, flannel robe about her. As she pulled her simple white curtains aside from her windows, she paused to study the sun rising just to the right of her front yard between the huge white pines that lined the drive.
The sky was waking up, too, and turning into a delicious golden pink right before her eyes. Since it was early spring, the windows were open to the soft sounds of morning birdsong. The fragrance of pine wafted in on the warm breeze.
Sam, her Austrian shepherd, preceded her down the hall, and she let him outside. In the kitchen, she poured coffee beans into a grinder and pushed its button. She got fresh water from the small water cooler in the corner and filled the coffee pot’s basket with the fresh-ground coffee.
Leaving the water to filter through, she turned her attention to the soiled dishes in the sink. Kathryn loaded the dishwasher and washed a few pots by hand in warm sudsy water, taking in the lavender sent of the dish soap.
Last night’s dinner guests had included two of her dearest friends, her daughter, son-in-law, and her two nearly grown granddaughters. After they had dined on her homemade spaghetti, they played games and talked and laughed until quite late. It had been one of the most fun evenings that Kathryn remembered in a long time.
Her dog Sam scratching at the door brought her back to the present. She let him in and fed him, noticing the cheerful sounds of the dry dog food hitting the bowl and the dog quickly crunching down his food.
Back to the freshly brewed coffee, she poured her first cup. How Kathryn loved her morning coffee time! She sat in the sitting room, relishing her coffee and rubbing the fur of her small Aussie sitting next to her. Through the French doors that led to the screened-in back porch, she observed the birds at their backyard feeders, identifying red cardinals, back and white chickadees, grey titmice, yellow finches, a red-bellied woodpecker, and a couple grosbeaks.
Kathryn picked up the book on the small table beside her well-worn off-white love seat. It was a book of meditation for grandmothers that her daughter Ellen had given her as a Christmas gift. Being a grandmother gave her such joy. She reminisced for a few moments about her Tessa and Livvy girls. They were beauties no doubt, but it was their small kindnesses and good manners that she remembered most about them. Once again she thought what a fine job Ellen and Nekos had done of raising them.
Once she had finished her first cup of coffee, Kathryn moved over and sat in front of a small altar. The altar contained a painting of Jesus, a small statue of Buddha, a smaller statue of Ganesha, a mezuzah, blue and white prayer beads that Kathryn had made for herself, chimes, and a candle. She lit the candle, rang the bells, picked up the beads, and sat in meditation and prayer for a few moments.
With her second cup of coffee, she moved to her computer. Preferring to write in the mornings when she was better rested, she finished up a piece of writing that she had been working on for her writing class. It was a poem, and she was pleased with its wording, images, and flow. Printing it out, she left it in the printer.
Then she turned to her correspondence on the computer: a few responses to her latest blog post, to emails, and to facebook messages. Shutting down her laptop computer and putting it away, Kathryn wrote several notes by hand on note paper that she had created herself, using ink and watercolor drawings. Her handwriting was still strong and distinctive.
Her stomach reminded her that it was empty. She prepared old fashioned oatmeal with sliced bananas and fresh blueberries and ate heartily, again watching the birds peck into their seeds. By now, Sam had grown restless, letting Kathryn know that it was time for his late morning walk. Quickly dressing in her shorts, she pulled on her wool socks and hiking boots. Instead of walking in the neighborhood, she decided to take Sam to the city park, where spring was making its slow show.
Since a flood had nearly destroyed the original river walk in the park, the city had restored the park by planting trees and flowers, mostly native to Tennessee. Kathryn examined the light green of spring leaves, the early yellow of the daffodils, the purple of the redbuds, and the white flowers of the dogwood trees, and she was profoundly content.
As she walked along, Kathryn reminisced about her best days of teaching high school English. Teaching was her first love. She had loved getting to the classroom early in the morning and organizing it for her lesson plans ahead. In her first classroom, she had had old wooden desks, which she loved, and dusty chalk boards to clean, and the students had had books, filled to the brim with literature. How she had loved literature and her students! Kathryn recalled fondly the old days of teaching, before the invasion of TVs and power points, computers, smart boards, and the internet.
Since it was a week day, no one else was in the park. Ignoring the city ordinance to keep her dog on his leash, she allowed Sam to run free and to swim in the river. Watching the sparkles of the sunshine on the river and the swooping kingfishers and peaceful blue heron on the other shore reminded her of her many adventure-filled days spent kayaking the rivers of Western North Carolina. Sam’s exuberant spirit energized her. Lifting her face to the sky and warm sun, she noticed the clearest, bluest sky and whitest cirrus clouds, her favorite kind of sky.
Feeling her heart sing, she walked on, breathing in the rebirth of another spring. The new green grass of spring seemed so vivid to her. Whitman had said, “The smallest sprout shows there is really no death;/And if ever there was, it led forward life, and does not wait at the end to arrest it,/And ceas’d the moment life appear’d./All goes onward and outward—nothing collapses;/And to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier.”
In repeating those lines to herself, Kathryn felt a sudden fatigue come over her, but she kept putting one foot in front of the other, as she had always done throughout her life. After a while, she found herself moving along with such a sweet lightness, and the spring’s colors became even more vivid, like on that fall foliage trip that she had taken to New England many years ago.
Then she noticed that Sam was no longer running ahead of her. She turned around and saw that he had stopped beside the body of an old lady. She recognized the fallen lady as her earthly self and sensed that she could go back if she chose. But already she viewed her beloved body as an empty shell.
Kathryn chose to keep walking, and on ahead, she saw her old golden retriever Spice, who had died decades ago, bounding out to greet her.
With her heart full to overflowing, Kathryn knew that she was ready to cross over. Her experience here on earth had taught her much--the least of all that we can not control life nor death--and she was now ready to wake up to a new life, to transition. Without fear, she let go and joyfully surrendered herself to the unknown and the unknowable.
“Our [death] is but a sleep and a forgetting:
The Soul that rises with us [is] our life’s Star
[And has] elsewhere its setting.
--with apologies to Wordsworth
Ode: Intimations of Immortality
Stepping into her fleece lined slippers, she wrapped her soft, flannel robe about her. As she pulled her simple white curtains aside from her windows, she paused to study the sun rising just to the right of her front yard between the huge white pines that lined the drive.
The sky was waking up, too, and turning into a delicious golden pink right before her eyes. Since it was early spring, the windows were open to the soft sounds of morning birdsong. The fragrance of pine wafted in on the warm breeze.
Sam, her Austrian shepherd, preceded her down the hall, and she let him outside. In the kitchen, she poured coffee beans into a grinder and pushed its button. She got fresh water from the small water cooler in the corner and filled the coffee pot’s basket with the fresh-ground coffee.
Leaving the water to filter through, she turned her attention to the soiled dishes in the sink. Kathryn loaded the dishwasher and washed a few pots by hand in warm sudsy water, taking in the lavender sent of the dish soap.
Last night’s dinner guests had included two of her dearest friends, her daughter, son-in-law, and her two nearly grown granddaughters. After they had dined on her homemade spaghetti, they played games and talked and laughed until quite late. It had been one of the most fun evenings that Kathryn remembered in a long time.
Her dog Sam scratching at the door brought her back to the present. She let him in and fed him, noticing the cheerful sounds of the dry dog food hitting the bowl and the dog quickly crunching down his food.
Back to the freshly brewed coffee, she poured her first cup. How Kathryn loved her morning coffee time! She sat in the sitting room, relishing her coffee and rubbing the fur of her small Aussie sitting next to her. Through the French doors that led to the screened-in back porch, she observed the birds at their backyard feeders, identifying red cardinals, back and white chickadees, grey titmice, yellow finches, a red-bellied woodpecker, and a couple grosbeaks.
Kathryn picked up the book on the small table beside her well-worn off-white love seat. It was a book of meditation for grandmothers that her daughter Ellen had given her as a Christmas gift. Being a grandmother gave her such joy. She reminisced for a few moments about her Tessa and Livvy girls. They were beauties no doubt, but it was their small kindnesses and good manners that she remembered most about them. Once again she thought what a fine job Ellen and Nekos had done of raising them.
Once she had finished her first cup of coffee, Kathryn moved over and sat in front of a small altar. The altar contained a painting of Jesus, a small statue of Buddha, a smaller statue of Ganesha, a mezuzah, blue and white prayer beads that Kathryn had made for herself, chimes, and a candle. She lit the candle, rang the bells, picked up the beads, and sat in meditation and prayer for a few moments.
With her second cup of coffee, she moved to her computer. Preferring to write in the mornings when she was better rested, she finished up a piece of writing that she had been working on for her writing class. It was a poem, and she was pleased with its wording, images, and flow. Printing it out, she left it in the printer.
Then she turned to her correspondence on the computer: a few responses to her latest blog post, to emails, and to facebook messages. Shutting down her laptop computer and putting it away, Kathryn wrote several notes by hand on note paper that she had created herself, using ink and watercolor drawings. Her handwriting was still strong and distinctive.
Her stomach reminded her that it was empty. She prepared old fashioned oatmeal with sliced bananas and fresh blueberries and ate heartily, again watching the birds peck into their seeds. By now, Sam had grown restless, letting Kathryn know that it was time for his late morning walk. Quickly dressing in her shorts, she pulled on her wool socks and hiking boots. Instead of walking in the neighborhood, she decided to take Sam to the city park, where spring was making its slow show.
Since a flood had nearly destroyed the original river walk in the park, the city had restored the park by planting trees and flowers, mostly native to Tennessee. Kathryn examined the light green of spring leaves, the early yellow of the daffodils, the purple of the redbuds, and the white flowers of the dogwood trees, and she was profoundly content.
As she walked along, Kathryn reminisced about her best days of teaching high school English. Teaching was her first love. She had loved getting to the classroom early in the morning and organizing it for her lesson plans ahead. In her first classroom, she had had old wooden desks, which she loved, and dusty chalk boards to clean, and the students had had books, filled to the brim with literature. How she had loved literature and her students! Kathryn recalled fondly the old days of teaching, before the invasion of TVs and power points, computers, smart boards, and the internet.
Since it was a week day, no one else was in the park. Ignoring the city ordinance to keep her dog on his leash, she allowed Sam to run free and to swim in the river. Watching the sparkles of the sunshine on the river and the swooping kingfishers and peaceful blue heron on the other shore reminded her of her many adventure-filled days spent kayaking the rivers of Western North Carolina. Sam’s exuberant spirit energized her. Lifting her face to the sky and warm sun, she noticed the clearest, bluest sky and whitest cirrus clouds, her favorite kind of sky.
Feeling her heart sing, she walked on, breathing in the rebirth of another spring. The new green grass of spring seemed so vivid to her. Whitman had said, “The smallest sprout shows there is really no death;/And if ever there was, it led forward life, and does not wait at the end to arrest it,/And ceas’d the moment life appear’d./All goes onward and outward—nothing collapses;/And to die is different from what any one supposed, and luckier.”
In repeating those lines to herself, Kathryn felt a sudden fatigue come over her, but she kept putting one foot in front of the other, as she had always done throughout her life. After a while, she found herself moving along with such a sweet lightness, and the spring’s colors became even more vivid, like on that fall foliage trip that she had taken to New England many years ago.
Then she noticed that Sam was no longer running ahead of her. She turned around and saw that he had stopped beside the body of an old lady. She recognized the fallen lady as her earthly self and sensed that she could go back if she chose. But already she viewed her beloved body as an empty shell.
Kathryn chose to keep walking, and on ahead, she saw her old golden retriever Spice, who had died decades ago, bounding out to greet her.
With her heart full to overflowing, Kathryn knew that she was ready to cross over. Her experience here on earth had taught her much--the least of all that we can not control life nor death--and she was now ready to wake up to a new life, to transition. Without fear, she let go and joyfully surrendered herself to the unknown and the unknowable.
“Our [death] is but a sleep and a forgetting:
The Soul that rises with us [is] our life’s Star
[And has] elsewhere its setting.
--with apologies to Wordsworth
Ode: Intimations of Immortality
Friday, November 15, 2013
Trees and consenting
If I had not been a high school English teacher, I would have liked to have been a botanist--and more specifically a dendrologist, one who studies trees. You see I love, and I mean l-o-v-e trees! Yes, I am a card-carrying tree hugger. When the flood of 2010 came, I wept to see that it had destroyed 25 to 50 trees in my back yard, (but of course, I was thrilled that most of my house was saved.)
Recently, in a walk at Centennial Park in Nashville, I came across the oldest Sycamore tree that I have ever seen. Sycamore is a favorite tree of mine, as I'm always seeing them when I walk along and paddle the rivers. Easy to recognize because of their lovely white bark and silvery leaves, I usually see them with somewhat skinny twisted trunks, but this Sycamore tree at Centennial had the thickest trunk and most beautiful leaves.
A very different, yet another of my favorite trees, is the ginkgo or gingko tree. The first one I saw was in the Japanese garden at Cheekwood. To culminate our study of the Eastern cultures though literature, I had taken my senior World Literature class to the Hindu temple on Old Hickory, then to lunch at Cheekwood, and then on a short walk, which ended in the Japanese garden, where we sat in silence.
That's when I first saw the ginkgo tree in all of its autumn glory! Since they can grow to 70' in height, the one in the Japanese garden at Cheekwood had definitely been kept small, like an ornamental tree. The ginkgos' uniquely fan-shaped leaves start out green but morph into a golden fall foliage.
The ginkgo tree is the oldest living tree on the planet. It's over 3000 years old. This relic from dinosaur times was nearly wiped out during the Ice Age everywhere except in China.
Recently, in a walk at Centennial Park in Nashville, I came across the oldest Sycamore tree that I have ever seen. Sycamore is a favorite tree of mine, as I'm always seeing them when I walk along and paddle the rivers. Easy to recognize because of their lovely white bark and silvery leaves, I usually see them with somewhat skinny twisted trunks, but this Sycamore tree at Centennial had the thickest trunk and most beautiful leaves.
A very different, yet another of my favorite trees, is the ginkgo or gingko tree. The first one I saw was in the Japanese garden at Cheekwood. To culminate our study of the Eastern cultures though literature, I had taken my senior World Literature class to the Hindu temple on Old Hickory, then to lunch at Cheekwood, and then on a short walk, which ended in the Japanese garden, where we sat in silence.
That's when I first saw the ginkgo tree in all of its autumn glory! Since they can grow to 70' in height, the one in the Japanese garden at Cheekwood had definitely been kept small, like an ornamental tree. The ginkgos' uniquely fan-shaped leaves start out green but morph into a golden fall foliage.
The ginkgo tree is the oldest living tree on the planet. It's over 3000 years old. This relic from dinosaur times was nearly wiped out during the Ice Age everywhere except in China.
The Ginkgo Pages website further relates that those Chinese Ginkgo biloba trees were mainly found in monasteries "in the mountains and in palace and temple gardens, where Buddhist monks cultivated the tree from about 1100 AD for its many good qualities."
Plant collectors from the West eventually were sold on Ginkgo biloba trees and brought specimens home. Besides its incredible beauty, the tree's "good qualities" include medicinal and culinary uses. This year I hope to plant one of these trees in my back yard to begin the renewal of the trees in my yard.
So all of this introduction to the ginkgo tree is to share with you my writing class homework assignment for this week. First, we were told by Vanderbilt Professor Victor Judge that each fall the ginkgo tree drops all of its leaves at once--in a matter of minutes. No one knows why or how this happens. Then Dr. Judge shared this lovely poem with us.
The Consent
Late in November, on a single night
Not even near to freezing, the ginkgo trees
That stand along the walk drop all their leaves
In one consent, and neither to rain nor to wind
But as though to time alone: the golden and green
Leaves litter the lawn today, that yesterday
Had spread aloft their fluttering fans of light.
What signal from the stars? What senses took it in?
What in those wooden motives so decided
To strike their leaves, to down their leaves,
Rebellion or surrender? and if this
Can happen thus, what race shall be exempt?
What use to learn the lessons taught by time.
If a star at any time may tell us: Now.
---------------------------------------
So here's the writing class homework assignment: Write about a time when you consented.
I love this teacher and his incredibly creative homework assignments.
If you were in his class, what would you write about?
(By the way, I love being a student again, instead of the teacher.)
I'll share my essay/composition/story with you next week!
Until then, thanks for reading my blog!
Monday, November 4, 2013
A memoir and the writing life: pentimento
Pentimento means "an underlying image in a painting, as an earlier or original draft that shows through, usually when the top layer of paint has become transparent with age."
". . . The paint has aged now and I [want] to see what was there for me once, what is there for me now."
--from Pentimento: A Book of Portraits by Lillian Hellman
The oil painting above the fireplace is a portrait of Laura when she was 75. You see a strong, independent, self-reliant woman, eyes filled with wisdom and joy. But if you look closely, you can also see vestiges of pain and suffering.
If you use your fingernail to scratch off the veneer of oil paint, you may see a different story painted underneath, if you have the heart to see. I will tell you, and only you, the story of her love, and I will tell it only once. So lean in, listen closely, and brace yourself. For to incarnate and personify such suffering can unsettle a soul.
Underneath the old paint, almost translucent now with age, lies another picture entirely.
It is so faded that I can hardly remember it--my original dream--a dream of love and family. I am Laura in the painting.
I am in my late twenties, and a friend has set me up on a date with Bill. When he comes to the door of my apartment, I am struck by his dark good looks. He is rebounding from a woman that he had lived with for several years. I am rebounding from my first marriage and all of the men that I dated, or didn’t date, in my 20s.
Despite women’s liberation and my being a professed feminist, the society and popular media of my childhood and teen years have taught me that a woman is nothing--no thing--without a man. And my family and society have taught me to think of myself as unattractive. So I am perhaps thinking that if I attract a handsome man, then that would prove to the world that I am attractive.
My hormones are also still at their peak, and because I did not bond with my father, I’m not looking for a tall, blond guy like him, but rather for a dark, shorter guy--with looks like my pretty mother, whose love seems to have eluded me. Having come from a damaged family, I am looking to create a family of my own.
I am looking for someone to love, and yes, someone to love me.
But all those thoughts are subconscious at this time. Not pieced together until much, much later.
On our first few dates, Bill tells me how his father had lost a million dollars and had gone bankrupt in the 1960s when Bill was in high school and how they had to move from a mansion, which he shows me, to a smaller, ordinary house, which he also shows me, and how he had to go from a private to a public school.
I do not question why he is telling me this story some ten years or more after the facts or how his father went bankrupt. His story makes me feel compassion for him.
I meet his family--his charming father and his odd mother, who reminds me of Miss Havisham--and his three sisters--one of whom is Bill’s twin. The twins Bill and Mary are the youngest in the family. The older sisters tell me how petted by their mother Bill was when he was a little boy, how he always got his way, and how he was expelled for misbehavior from one private school after another.
Bill laughs those stories away--making everything sound like a lark. Besides his sense of humor and good looks, I am also attracted by his intelligence.
After we have dated for about a year, Bill shows up at my new condo, telling me that he’s given his notice to his apartment complex and is moving in with me. We are already spending nights at each other’s places, so that seems like the logical next step. But he does not ask me--he tells me.
I consent.
After living with Bill for a year, I decide that he is definitely not the man that I have been searching for. I ask him to leave. But instead of leaving, Bill asks me to marry him. Every fiber in my being screams, “No!”
I say, “Yes.”
And so like Odysseus, I begin my odyssey through all sorts of hellish scenarios for the next ten years. It is a trip on which at times I will doubt my own sanity and sink deeper into my own loss of self.
You must remember that I want to love someone. I do not choose wisely, but I do choose to love Bill.
I give and give and give, and Bill takes and takes and takes.
At 33, I give birth to our daughter Ellen. She is the darling of our lives. Bill is crazy about our little girl. When he is home, he is a really good father--changing diapers and giving baths and helping when she is sick. He also helps out around the house--vacuuming, picking up, and washing dishes. Bill always thanks me when I cook dinner for us.
But whatever Bill wants to do, he does.
He wants to go out once a week and “shoot pool” with some friends. Then once a week becomes twice a week. Then it becomes overnight because he had drunk too much beer, and it is dangerous for him to drive home, so he sleeps on the couch of a friend, or so he says.
I believe him.
Then as things progress, I never know if Bill is coming home at night or not. I make dinner and make excuses. And sit in our living room until the early hours of morning, looking out the front window, waiting and waiting and waiting for his car lights in the driveway.
I blame myself. If only I were prettier or more loving, Bill would come home to me.
In my daytime life, I am a respected teacher at the local high school, and I care for our toddler and our home. My parents call me to complain about each other and about my sister. I do not tell them about Bill.
The only thing that seems to keep Bill at home is roses. He plants roses in the side yard, then in the front yard, and then in the back yard. Bill spends all of his daytime hours working on his rose bushes. People drive by to see the lovely roses in our yard. Vases filled with roses adorn our house for six months of the year.
When I confront him about his nighttime absences, Bill gets angry. His quick temper strikes a chord in me from my childhood, and I curl up inside myself. I resolve to be stronger. Surely things will get better.
I tell no one what is happening. I cry in the shower, and my tears wash down the drain. I am desperate.
I become pregnant again, but I cannot bring another child into this life. Tragically, I lose this baby to the vagaries of life.
One night I meet Bill at the door at 3 a.m., demanding of him once again, what is going on? With tears streaming down his cheeks, he tells me that he is a cocaine addict and is “morally bankrupt.” I am shocked, but I am relieved to know what has been going on. I feel compassion for him.
Now I have an answer to the conundrum, and now I can fix the problem.
Later that day, I call a friend who works at Cumberland Heights. She tells me that Bill needs to come in for treatment immediately. Of course, that is the answer. I am so sure that we can still be a family, and I am determined to love and support Bill.
I attend family week at the treatment center and vow to do everything “right” to make this nightmare go away.
The week that Bill is out of his month-long treatment, I get word that my 64-year-old father has died suddenly of a massive heart attack. We travel to South Carolina to bury my father.
With our 4-year-old daughter, I stay on to comfort and help my mother. When I call home late at night and get no answer, I know that Bill is using again. I am devastated.
Leaving an ailing mother who thinks that I will somehow come live with her and take care of her, I come home to a relapsed husband. I struggle with what to do. So worrisome is the situation that I no longer sleep at night.
Bill begins to steal money from my checking and savings accounts, and he steals from and depletes Ellen’s college fund that my father had started for her.
Ten months creep by. I call and visit my mother in SC as often as I can. I get an in-home nurse to care for her. Then I get a phone call that my 65-year-old mother has died of a cardiac arrest.
We travel to SC to bury her. We have to stop on the side of the road while I get sick to my stomach. I stay on in SC with my 5-year-old daughter to settle the estate.
Bill goes home to Tennessee and continues to use cocaine. He loses his job and is out of work for a year, collecting unemployment.
I feel as if I am coming apart at the seams.
Someone tells me that Bill is like two different people--the man he is out in the Nashville dive bars, and the man he is at home. But I know that the man in the bars bleeds over to the man at home.
Convinced that Bill is possessed with a demon, our minister conducts an exorcism on him.
I do not want my marriage to die, but I discover that Bill has been sleeping with various women for the past few years, has had numerous one-night-stands--some of the women I know. I have been so naïve.
I ask him to leave. Blaming the drugs/alcohol, saying that addiction is a disease, and saying that I married him “for better or for worse, in sickness and in health,” Bill refuses to leave. He becomes more and more rageful. Each time his anger erupts, I crumble inside. I become afraid of him.
I do not comprehend what is going on. The harder I try, the worse things get. It’s as if I lead a double life. At school, I teach ethics through literature, yet at home, I live in an amoral environment.
Teaching is one of the things that saves me though; in the classroom, in its present moments, I can forget for a while what my life at home is like.
One Saturday when Ellen and I are away from home, Bill brutally kills one of our pets in a fit of rage. I notice that the kitten is missing and ask him where the she is, and he answers, “I killed her.” He shows me the caved-in hole in the garage wall where he claims that he threw her. I am horrified and sickened and repulsed. I never tell anyone.
Even after I tack up a poster over it, that hole in the garage wall haunts me for many years to come.
As things escalate, I fear for me and my daughter. One night, she and I are forced to crawl out her bedroom window and go to one of the neighbors, who refuses us sanctuary. We walk up the street to friends, but Bill comes to their door and pounds on it, demanding that Ellen and I come home.
It is Christmas; we go home.
As Bill continues to promise to do better and goes to another treatment center and fails again to stay sober, this cycle of separations and reunions continues through countless times, through countless months, and through countless years.
Countless more times, he does not come home at night, and countless more times, my hopes are crushed.
I remember this one time in particular--indicative of so many other times. It is a snow day, so we are out of school, and 7-year-old Ellen and I make a wonderful snowman with a straw hat on his head and a red scarf around his neck. We can hardly wait to show it to Bill. As our snow-wet clothes dry near the warm wood stove, we make homemade vegetable soup and cornbread and call him on the kitchen phone, telling him we can’t wait until he gets home to see our snowman.
But once again, Bill never comes home that night.
The next day, the snowman melts and with it all my dreams of family. As the 12-step program teaches, I am truly “sick and tired of being sick and tired.”
I give up.
I realize that I must let this man go for the sake of my daughter. I do not yet see that it is also for my own sake.
As I tell Bill for the last time that he has to leave our home, that I want a divorce, he and I sit in the old rocking chairs on the front porch. My love for him is still as tangible as the gold wedding band that I remove from my finger and tuck into the palm of his hand, curling his fingers around it.
I tell him that because I love him, he must leave. That it must be my enabling him that keeps him in his disease of addiction. He tells me not to give up on him. But I had already given up.
Because Bill objects to the divorce and fights to stay married to me, the divorce takes two long years. Because Tennessee is a no-fault divorce state, I am forced to write Bill a check for $20,000 to be able to keep the house. Because I have a lousy lawyer and am not thinking straight and still have a lot of fear of Bill, he gets custody of Ellen for every other weekend. For the next ten years until Ellen is in high school, child visitation is a constant drama, a constant worry, and a constant heartbreak. But that is mostly Ellen’s story.
I was just beginning to realize my own crazy addiction to Bill. Why did I allow myself to be sucked into such a relationship with such a man? It would take me the next two decades--until into my early 60s--to figure that one out.
First, I had to take the time to find myself. The time to become the woman in the painting--the one whose eyes are filled with wisdom and with mindful joyfulness and with those ever-so-small vestiges of released pain.
". . . The paint has aged now and I [want] to see what was there for me once, what is there for me now."
--from Pentimento: A Book of Portraits by Lillian Hellman
The oil painting above the fireplace is a portrait of Laura when she was 75. You see a strong, independent, self-reliant woman, eyes filled with wisdom and joy. But if you look closely, you can also see vestiges of pain and suffering.
If you use your fingernail to scratch off the veneer of oil paint, you may see a different story painted underneath, if you have the heart to see. I will tell you, and only you, the story of her love, and I will tell it only once. So lean in, listen closely, and brace yourself. For to incarnate and personify such suffering can unsettle a soul.
Underneath the old paint, almost translucent now with age, lies another picture entirely.
It is so faded that I can hardly remember it--my original dream--a dream of love and family. I am Laura in the painting.
I am in my late twenties, and a friend has set me up on a date with Bill. When he comes to the door of my apartment, I am struck by his dark good looks. He is rebounding from a woman that he had lived with for several years. I am rebounding from my first marriage and all of the men that I dated, or didn’t date, in my 20s.
Despite women’s liberation and my being a professed feminist, the society and popular media of my childhood and teen years have taught me that a woman is nothing--no thing--without a man. And my family and society have taught me to think of myself as unattractive. So I am perhaps thinking that if I attract a handsome man, then that would prove to the world that I am attractive.
My hormones are also still at their peak, and because I did not bond with my father, I’m not looking for a tall, blond guy like him, but rather for a dark, shorter guy--with looks like my pretty mother, whose love seems to have eluded me. Having come from a damaged family, I am looking to create a family of my own.
I am looking for someone to love, and yes, someone to love me.
But all those thoughts are subconscious at this time. Not pieced together until much, much later.
On our first few dates, Bill tells me how his father had lost a million dollars and had gone bankrupt in the 1960s when Bill was in high school and how they had to move from a mansion, which he shows me, to a smaller, ordinary house, which he also shows me, and how he had to go from a private to a public school.
I do not question why he is telling me this story some ten years or more after the facts or how his father went bankrupt. His story makes me feel compassion for him.
I meet his family--his charming father and his odd mother, who reminds me of Miss Havisham--and his three sisters--one of whom is Bill’s twin. The twins Bill and Mary are the youngest in the family. The older sisters tell me how petted by their mother Bill was when he was a little boy, how he always got his way, and how he was expelled for misbehavior from one private school after another.
Bill laughs those stories away--making everything sound like a lark. Besides his sense of humor and good looks, I am also attracted by his intelligence.
After we have dated for about a year, Bill shows up at my new condo, telling me that he’s given his notice to his apartment complex and is moving in with me. We are already spending nights at each other’s places, so that seems like the logical next step. But he does not ask me--he tells me.
I consent.
After living with Bill for a year, I decide that he is definitely not the man that I have been searching for. I ask him to leave. But instead of leaving, Bill asks me to marry him. Every fiber in my being screams, “No!”
I say, “Yes.”
And so like Odysseus, I begin my odyssey through all sorts of hellish scenarios for the next ten years. It is a trip on which at times I will doubt my own sanity and sink deeper into my own loss of self.
You must remember that I want to love someone. I do not choose wisely, but I do choose to love Bill.
I give and give and give, and Bill takes and takes and takes.
At 33, I give birth to our daughter Ellen. She is the darling of our lives. Bill is crazy about our little girl. When he is home, he is a really good father--changing diapers and giving baths and helping when she is sick. He also helps out around the house--vacuuming, picking up, and washing dishes. Bill always thanks me when I cook dinner for us.
But whatever Bill wants to do, he does.
He wants to go out once a week and “shoot pool” with some friends. Then once a week becomes twice a week. Then it becomes overnight because he had drunk too much beer, and it is dangerous for him to drive home, so he sleeps on the couch of a friend, or so he says.
I believe him.
Then as things progress, I never know if Bill is coming home at night or not. I make dinner and make excuses. And sit in our living room until the early hours of morning, looking out the front window, waiting and waiting and waiting for his car lights in the driveway.
I blame myself. If only I were prettier or more loving, Bill would come home to me.
In my daytime life, I am a respected teacher at the local high school, and I care for our toddler and our home. My parents call me to complain about each other and about my sister. I do not tell them about Bill.
The only thing that seems to keep Bill at home is roses. He plants roses in the side yard, then in the front yard, and then in the back yard. Bill spends all of his daytime hours working on his rose bushes. People drive by to see the lovely roses in our yard. Vases filled with roses adorn our house for six months of the year.
When I confront him about his nighttime absences, Bill gets angry. His quick temper strikes a chord in me from my childhood, and I curl up inside myself. I resolve to be stronger. Surely things will get better.
I tell no one what is happening. I cry in the shower, and my tears wash down the drain. I am desperate.
I become pregnant again, but I cannot bring another child into this life. Tragically, I lose this baby to the vagaries of life.
One night I meet Bill at the door at 3 a.m., demanding of him once again, what is going on? With tears streaming down his cheeks, he tells me that he is a cocaine addict and is “morally bankrupt.” I am shocked, but I am relieved to know what has been going on. I feel compassion for him.
Now I have an answer to the conundrum, and now I can fix the problem.
Later that day, I call a friend who works at Cumberland Heights. She tells me that Bill needs to come in for treatment immediately. Of course, that is the answer. I am so sure that we can still be a family, and I am determined to love and support Bill.
I attend family week at the treatment center and vow to do everything “right” to make this nightmare go away.
The week that Bill is out of his month-long treatment, I get word that my 64-year-old father has died suddenly of a massive heart attack. We travel to South Carolina to bury my father.
With our 4-year-old daughter, I stay on to comfort and help my mother. When I call home late at night and get no answer, I know that Bill is using again. I am devastated.
Leaving an ailing mother who thinks that I will somehow come live with her and take care of her, I come home to a relapsed husband. I struggle with what to do. So worrisome is the situation that I no longer sleep at night.
Bill begins to steal money from my checking and savings accounts, and he steals from and depletes Ellen’s college fund that my father had started for her.
We travel to SC to bury her. We have to stop on the side of the road while I get sick to my stomach. I stay on in SC with my 5-year-old daughter to settle the estate.
Bill goes home to Tennessee and continues to use cocaine. He loses his job and is out of work for a year, collecting unemployment.
I feel as if I am coming apart at the seams.
Someone tells me that Bill is like two different people--the man he is out in the Nashville dive bars, and the man he is at home. But I know that the man in the bars bleeds over to the man at home.
Convinced that Bill is possessed with a demon, our minister conducts an exorcism on him.
I do not want my marriage to die, but I discover that Bill has been sleeping with various women for the past few years, has had numerous one-night-stands--some of the women I know. I have been so naïve.
I ask him to leave. Blaming the drugs/alcohol, saying that addiction is a disease, and saying that I married him “for better or for worse, in sickness and in health,” Bill refuses to leave. He becomes more and more rageful. Each time his anger erupts, I crumble inside. I become afraid of him.
I do not comprehend what is going on. The harder I try, the worse things get. It’s as if I lead a double life. At school, I teach ethics through literature, yet at home, I live in an amoral environment.
Teaching is one of the things that saves me though; in the classroom, in its present moments, I can forget for a while what my life at home is like.
Even after I tack up a poster over it, that hole in the garage wall haunts me for many years to come.
As things escalate, I fear for me and my daughter. One night, she and I are forced to crawl out her bedroom window and go to one of the neighbors, who refuses us sanctuary. We walk up the street to friends, but Bill comes to their door and pounds on it, demanding that Ellen and I come home.
It is Christmas; we go home.
As Bill continues to promise to do better and goes to another treatment center and fails again to stay sober, this cycle of separations and reunions continues through countless times, through countless months, and through countless years.
Countless more times, he does not come home at night, and countless more times, my hopes are crushed.
I remember this one time in particular--indicative of so many other times. It is a snow day, so we are out of school, and 7-year-old Ellen and I make a wonderful snowman with a straw hat on his head and a red scarf around his neck. We can hardly wait to show it to Bill. As our snow-wet clothes dry near the warm wood stove, we make homemade vegetable soup and cornbread and call him on the kitchen phone, telling him we can’t wait until he gets home to see our snowman.
But once again, Bill never comes home that night.
The next day, the snowman melts and with it all my dreams of family. As the 12-step program teaches, I am truly “sick and tired of being sick and tired.”
I give up.
I realize that I must let this man go for the sake of my daughter. I do not yet see that it is also for my own sake.
As I tell Bill for the last time that he has to leave our home, that I want a divorce, he and I sit in the old rocking chairs on the front porch. My love for him is still as tangible as the gold wedding band that I remove from my finger and tuck into the palm of his hand, curling his fingers around it.
I tell him that because I love him, he must leave. That it must be my enabling him that keeps him in his disease of addiction. He tells me not to give up on him. But I had already given up.
Because Bill objects to the divorce and fights to stay married to me, the divorce takes two long years. Because Tennessee is a no-fault divorce state, I am forced to write Bill a check for $20,000 to be able to keep the house. Because I have a lousy lawyer and am not thinking straight and still have a lot of fear of Bill, he gets custody of Ellen for every other weekend. For the next ten years until Ellen is in high school, child visitation is a constant drama, a constant worry, and a constant heartbreak. But that is mostly Ellen’s story.
I was just beginning to realize my own crazy addiction to Bill. Why did I allow myself to be sucked into such a relationship with such a man? It would take me the next two decades--until into my early 60s--to figure that one out.
First, I had to take the time to find myself. The time to become the woman in the painting--the one whose eyes are filled with wisdom and with mindful joyfulness and with those ever-so-small vestiges of released pain.
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