I’m sitting in my glider rocking chair, covered in a quilt
that has seen far better days but was made by my grandmother out of grandpa’s
work shirts and other bits of fabric she had collected over the years. Tattered and torn is accompanied by loved and
cherished in this covering. It has been
quite a long day. Because I’ve run out,
I haven’t taken my depression medication in four days. After one day, my nervous system gets upset,
and makes it known by sending electric shocks through my body each time I blink
my eyes. As this is day four, it is a
bit of an understatement to say that it’s worse than that. I woke this morning and Riley was up and
ready to play. I felt like I would fly
apart at any second, but gave my best effort not to. We watched some cartoons, and Riley played
some in his room while I rested on the couch.
I gathered myself together as best I could and took us to church. I suppose twenty minutes late is better than
a 4th week in a row of not attending. After church we went for fried chicken at the
diner. I wore sunglasses from the time
we left the house until the time we returned.
Riley had been talking all morning about playing outside with his
Frisbee. I didn’t have it in me, but
hoped that Michael would take the Frisbee shift and let Riley burn off his
lunch of pancakes and syrup followed by bites of each of our brownies for
dessert before laying low a couple of hours.
I for some reason tried instead to get Riley to lay down with me. Michael got up and Riley didn’t want to lie
still, probably from the loads of sugar we just sent coursing through his veins
only minutes before. I told him he could go play in his room. I remember falling asleep really fast. Then I remember waking up to the sound of
Riley kicking the wall; a thing he knows far better than to do. I suspected that he was looking for attention
from one of us. He got it. It was not positive attention, but Riley
isn’t picky. He will take any attention
he can get, positive or negative. I just
wish I could get him to seek the positive with as much fervency as he seeks the
negative. When I woke, It was my shift
again, as I promised Michael I would make sure he could go out for a ride on
his motorcycle today, since I preempted his trip yesterday with a trip of my
own. So, he left and Riley and I played
some, and I watched a little bit of a show, and then we went outside. I had been what we call ‘barky’ all day. Cranky and irritable doesn’t quite describe it. While outside, the renters downstairs came to
pay the rent while Riley played in the yard.
I called Michael’s Mom and Dad to tell them the renters had paid, and I
made the mistake of complaining to Mom about my frustrations with Riley and
Michael. She rightfully chastised me for
doing Riley a disservice in his life by not getting my stuff together, and by
not communicating with my husband. I was
on the edge of falling apart all day.
She is the last person on this earth that I would ever want to upset,
but at that moment the fine threads like that of my quilt holding together the
outer shell of me gave way, and I was reduced to tears. I did something that I have never done in my
life. I hung up on her. I couldn’t bear to face my feeling like a
disgrace to parenthood-to say nothing of daughterhood. I sat there in my lawn chair and cried and
cried until I couldn’t breathe. Riley
tried to comfort me. He said, “It’s okay
mama, I take care of ooh.” I cried
more. What a lovely heart God placed in
my boy. The boy I was failing with. The exchange was only seconds, but years of
failures flooded my thoughts. “I am a
bad mama.” I said, meaning it to the
depths of my soul. Through my sobs, he
hugged me and patted my head. “You are a
good mama. It be okay.” I couldn’t stop crying. I couldn’t stand the thought of failing
him. I couldn’t stand the thought that I
had hung up on Mom. I tried to call back
if only to apologize. The line was
busy. More tears. I couldn’t see. My head was pounding. I finally took a deep breath and calmed a bit. I called again. The phone rang. She answered.
I burst into tears. We talked and
I cried and eventually I had worked myself into a frenzy. I couldn’t breathe, and I couldn’t see. I was a bad mom and a bad daughter. No one said these things except me, but I
believed them to be true. I had fallen
completely apart. Michael came home from
his ride then. He coaxed me inside,
hoping to avoid the scene I could easily have made. I went to the bathroom and climbed in the
shower and sat down under the stream of heat and steam and continued to
sob. I could not stop
hyperventilating. The tears flowed from
my eyes as if they had been held back for ages.
I had to take a sedative to finally calm down. My heart is so fragile. My temper is so short. I am able to forget that about myself when I
have my medication to rely on. After my
attack, I took a moment to calm down, and then I played school-buses with my
boy until his bed time. He is such a
good boy. This is not the life I wanted
for him. He has struggles and obstacles
of his own. No child deserves to have to
reassure their mother at the tender age of six.
They need to play hard and live a full and fun life. I feel sorry that he has to wait for me
because I am slow. That he has to be
gentle with me because I’m fragile.
Please note at this point that just because he is supposed to be gentle
doesn’t at all mean that he is. But he doesn’t
understand, and quite frankly he shouldn’t have to. But alas, I suppose each of
us has to take our life’s experiences as they come, and from each one choose to
either learn a lesson and grow, or drink in the draughts of bitterness set
before us and simply endure. Tonight I
will try to accomplish the former, and shrug off the latter and substitute
a cup of hot chamomile tea.
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Missing Billy
As I sit here, I try to think back. I met Billy while he was still in high
school. His friends were my friends, and
because my friend Emily and I were a little older and shared the rent on a
house, we typically had lots of visitors.
Emily was dating Aaron Sanders, and I was dating Michael Williamson,
both of whom Billy knew, either from school or from ‘around.’ Billy would grace
us with his presence on occasion, and always be welcome, witty and wonderful to
be around. Emily and I were the hosts,
but he seemed to be happy to provide entertainment. He and ‘the guys’ -- Aaron, Dustin, Patrick,
Damien, Michael, Rob, Jed and Reed and Laramey, (I have mostly guy friends) and a
stream of others seemed to compete for laughter amongst the group. I remember Billy being full of hardware J I couldn’t imagine having so many piercings,
but they suited him quite nicely. I
remember one particular night close to the end of high school for them. They had their prom, and quite a few people—even
some I didn’t know—came to our house for a get-together afterwards. Many of the party-goers stayed the night at
our house on couches, in chairs, pallets on the floor, etc. Billy, however, ended up sleeping like a rock
on the hardwood floor. He started out
his sleeping endeavor in the living room, but somehow ended up down the hall
and around the corner in one of the bedrooms, snoring happily. My friend Emily woke up at some point to use
the bathroom and tripped over him and nearly face-planted in the hallway. Neither of us will ever forget that!
Then I try to think forward.
I remember meeting Billy's wife for the first time. I don’t remember exact details. I remember it was back behind the glove
factory on one of those side streets at a house. I don’t remember why we were there. I just remember thinking to myself “I really
like her!” Then, sometime later we (My
husband and I) saw Billy and his wife in their car in the Leatherwood parking
lot, and lo and behold, they had a baby boy – quite possibly the cutest kid I’d
ever seen in my life. I was so happy for Billy!
Then I was shocked.
He told us he had cancer. After
that meeting, a long, long time went by before I heard anything about Billy
again. I thought about him and all the
guys a lot as life happened along as is its habit to do. I asked someone somewhere how Billy was, and
they said better, and that he was working as a medic. Awesome! I decided to look him up on the
notorious Facebook spy network, and found that he was just as awesome and funny
as ever, and that there was a new baby to adore there. I loved how he called her Jack It seemed so endearing to have this beautiful
girl with a beautiful name being called simply Jack. I never got the chance to ask him why he
called her that. I would have loved to
know the story. There had to be a
story. With Billy, there was always a
good story!
I may not have had the in-between time with Billy that I
would have liked, but that is actually true of many of my friends since the
early days after high school. Just
because we were far apart doesn’t for a second mean that they weren’t thought
of, missed, wondered about, loved, cherished for the memories they helped to
make, and remembered for all the special things that made them who they were to
us. I feel honored to be even a small
part of his full life, and I’m sorry that we lost him so soon. But much can be learned from someone who was
loved and who loved so much. May God
bless Billy’s family and his children and his many, many friends. I hope that reading this will stir love and
respect in the hearts of any who knew him.
It was certainly stirring in the writing. I will miss you, and I am not alone.
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