Sunday, November 3, 2013

The Joy of Repeating


The Joy of Repeating
            Emily’s eager voice comes through the other end of the phone. 
            “Mommy, I was wondering if...maybe...you know...if it’s okay with you...because Bryn’s mom already said it’s okay...so I wanted to know...if it’s not too much trouble...” Her voice fades out into the distance, and I smile on the other end of the line, knowing what she’s about to ask.
            “Just tell me what you want to ask me, Monkey.”
            “Well, Bryn wanted to know if maybe I could stay and spend the night at her house and then tomorrow we could come to my house and we could have a sleepover there and maybe we could go to a movie or something or we could watch something on Netflix and do we have any popcorn?”
            Dave sits in his chair next to me, his feet propped up on the ottoman, our brindle lab mix, Desi, snuggling by his side.  He chuckles and nods his head in agreement, mirroring my actions as though we’re one body with two heads.  I think to myself that I’ve heard this conversation before, but that time the twelve-year-old voice on the other end of the line was mine.
            I said yes, of course, to a squeaky chorus of “She said yes! She said yes!” from the other end of the line.
            A friendship that’s lasted almost forty years so far began that way, too.  Ginger and I were like two opposite sides of the same coin.  Her blonde curls the opposite of my brunette shag haircut, her bright blue eyes in every way different from my dark brown ones, and yet the friendship that we forged during the winter of 1976 in Miss Byerline’s third grade classroom and on the frozen playground of Center School in Lenox would survive marriages, the births of four children and the loss of one, her parents divorce and mine moving us over a thousand miles apart, the death of a woman we both called “Mom”, a breast cancer diagnosis, two mastectomies, chemotherapy, and a reconstruction, a spinal surgery and a forearm rebuild, our fathers’ heart attacks, years when we spoke only on holidays, and ones where we were as inseparable over the phone as we once were on that elementary school playground.  What I didn’t know all those years ago, while we protected each other from the threats from Barron Kern that he’d whitewash us in the snow if he caught us, was that this friendship, this magical, strong bond that we’d created, would be the sustaining force of my life.
            In Emily and Bryn, it happens again.  Emily’s long, dark hair and deep brown eyes are the opposite of Bryn’s blonde curls and laughing blue eyes.  Like Ginger and I, their interests diverge, but they find common ground in a friendship that knows nothing about differences.  The next evening I hear them in the basement, their little girl giggles calling to me up the stairs in a way that makes my heart grow and ache at the same time.  I bark down half-hearted warnings to turn off the lights and go to bed, but behind my stern voice is a grin turned up on one side and a knowing shake of my head.  This is what best friends should do.
            Forty years ago, Ginger’s mom called up the stairs to her bedroom with the same words, the same tone, and likely the same smile.  We lay side-by-side in her twin bed, staring up at the Andy Gibb poster on her ceiling, drinking lime Kool-aid that we’d made with three times as much sugar as the packet instructions called for, and dreaming of our somedays.  Our hands still smell of horses from working in the barn behind her family’s house, and my cheeks are still red from the wind whipping at them while I watched Ginger skillfully ride Dixie around the ring and maneuver her over low jumps.  My boots sit at the end of the bed, and there’s a combination of hay and manure stuck to the bottom of the left sole from when we mucked out his stall together.  Tomorrow, while I’m at my gymnastics team practice, cleaned of barn debris and dressed in a navy blue leotard with red and white stripes that run from under my wrist down to my hip, Ginger will be out in the ring again, she and Dixie riding circles in the soft, brown dirt, jumping the fences, and feeding the big dairy cow in the meadow under the grey winter skies of western New England. 
            After school on Monday, when Emily heads to her middle school play rehearsal, Bryn will return home to walk her basset hounds, Sadie and Sunny.  Emily will sing, dance, and smile on the stage while Bryn circles the neighborhood with her charges.  When Bryn’s chores are done and Emily’s rehearsal over, they’ll be on the phone with each other again, calling and texting and talking like only best friends do.  They’ll talk about the boys they like, what they’ll do on the first snow day of the school year, and why having much older brothers is both a blessing and a curse. 
            And when I descend the stairs and find them in the basement, the glow from the television screen is the only light in the room.  On the floor below it, they snuggle side-by-side in sleeping bags, both finally asleep and maybe dreaming of their somedays.  I switch off the television, grab the glasses of half-drunk milk, and walk back up the stairs thinking about their future, of all the joy and pain that they might see one another through over the next forty years.  And I hope that the bond that Ginger and I found in one another will repeat in them, that Emily will be by Bryn’s side on the day she marries the love of her life, and that Bryn will be the one to lighten Emily’s suffering when a tragedy befalls her family.  That this friendship, this bond, this magic, will last a lifetime because this is what I know, after all of the fear and the joy, the grief and the celebrations, the faith and doubt: as Robert Frost said, “In three words I can sum up everything I’ve learned about life: it goes on.” 

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Communion: A Boy and His Dogs


Communion
            It wasn’t so much that he said goodbye to them.  It was more like he communed with them. 
            Alex knelt on the floor beside Lucy, our yellow lab mix, and touched his forehead to hers, his fingers stroking the sides of her face.  Both of them, with their eyes closed, understood that this was the last time they’d be like this for a while, and if dogs could cry, I’m certain Lucy would have sobbed.  Desi’s brindle stripes stood out against the red chair that she’d melted into.  Her long body was spread over the back cushion, one back leg underneath her and one dangling toward the seat in a hopeless gesture.  Her head lowered to her front feet and cradled by the arm of the chair, the look in her eyes spoke volumes.  The six-foot-tall young man that moved to her side and kissed the top of her head barely resembled the squealing little boy he’d been almost nine years ago when she bound into the room to surprise him the day we brought them home.
            We’d sat Alex on the couch when he came home from school that day in 2005, instructed him to close his eyes and hold out his hands, and deposited a ball of warm blonde fluff into his small palms.  Lucy relaxed in his hands, pointing her tiny brown nose up at him, her whiskers twitching with curiosity. 
            “This is Lucy.  Lucy?  Alex.  Alex?  Lucy.  What do you think?” I asked him with tears in my eyes.
            “I love her!  I love her so much!”  He lowered his face to hers, both of them breathing in the scent of the other, memorizing the smell of unconditional love. 
            “I hate to break this up, but there’s one more thing...” I trailed off as the door to the family room opened and Desi bounced into the room.  All long, gangly puppy legs and tail wagging in circles like churning helicopter blades, she ran right for him.  Her white toes and chest gave contrast to the black and brown brindle stripes of her coat, and a warm pink tongue hung from her mouth.  I scooped her up and put her in his lap, and within a moment she had her little puppy paws up on his chest, covering his face in tiny, frantic kisses.  A boy and his dogs. 
            He’d find comfort in them through the years of his childhood and young adulthood.  They were there when he had his heart broken for the first time, when his grandmother passed away, when Dave moved to Colorado five months ahead of the family for a new job.  The three of them had seen difficult days together, but their presence was resolute.  They existed as the one constant for the boy who loved them in a string of months and years filled with heartache. 
            So on this last day, when the car was jammed from roof to floor with microwave, mini-fridge, clothes, books, and childhood memories, this was our grown son’s final task before we pulled out of the driveway for the eight hour trek to Fort Lewis College in Durango.  The girls aren’t as perky now as they once were.  Lucy climbs the stairs more slowly than she used to, and Desi’s once dark snout is covered with the white hair of advancing age.  But one thing is still the same: they are still his puppies in every way that counts.
            He never said a word.  No murmurs of goodbye or missing them.  He just knelt down that way, his forehead pressed to theirs, his soft kisses left on their fur.  He unfolded his long limbs from the floor, brushed past his Dad and I in the hallway and walked out onto the back deck.  We watched him there, the sliding glass door closed behind him, at the edge of the world he knew but about to step off into a new one.  Surrounded by the flutter of leaves and the chirps of squirrels running from tree to tree, he stared blankly out into the grass, the garden, the swing set Papa built for him when he was just five years old.
            I turned to my husband and pantomimed a knife stabbing through my heart and turning round and round in jagged circles. 
            A week later, Alex is in his dorm room four hundred miles away.
            They’re still looking for him.