Mother’s Day

Mother’s Day is about me as a child and my mother as the celebrated one.  The one day when we muster up $5.00 for a card and still she did the dishes.  Ok, I am living in the past.  The past is easier; ok, only when nostalgia wipes away the discord and the angst.

So, POB (partner of blogger) and I are the moms of our generation (note that I didn’t say “mothers” — the connotations can be so tragic).  And like our mothers before us, we got cards and did the dishes.  This is how you make people feel good about dishes, you call it a “tradition”.  SOB (sister of blogger) tried to convince POB to have take-out.  POB, in tribute and in astonishing similarity to MOPOB (mother z”l of POB), refused take-out.  POB opted for a horrendously, complicated — and delicious — dinner. (Note to self: block the Epicurious app on her iTouch.)

Between POB’s thinking of MOPOB and my thinking about MOB (mother z”l of blogger), we made quite a pair.  Being a mom is the best thing I do; it is just that I want my mom in the world.  Ok, enough self pity (for now; check back later).

So, we had most of the usual complement of family for Sunday night dinner.  Notable exceptions were a Cousin Hockey Player, and Cousin Gentle who visits his mother’s grave (MOCG) on Mother’s Day.  The warning was clear: be there or be talked about.  Email me if you want the minutes of the family meeting.

FOB (father of blogger) is turning 90 this year.  In an effort to have an intimate setting, the guest list was cut off on a generational level.  Grandnephews and nieces are not invited.  However, my father felt bad about certain members of that generation not being invited.  So, I was designated as the most direct and “Larry King”-like child to dispense the news.  FOB had to use the “facilities” as a ruse to find out whether I told his grandniece that he loved her but, in the interests of familial harmony, needed to exclude her from the celebration.  Meanwhile, I wondered why I was escorting FOB to the bathroom because I am not the MD in the family.  Does anyone else have this family or are we just nuts?

Back to dinner.  Dear Cousin Gentle: HOSOB (husband of SOB) is winning the race for who can eat the most.  He had two helpings on two different place mats (I won’t delve into that):

And there was your plate, sad and empty:

And did we mention the wine and the dessert?

Because you had a good reason for not coming (you were visiting MOCG), we didn’t talk about you — too much. But where were you for the bird walk lead by HOSOB?  Two family gatherings missed.  I understand through the family grapevine that you are alive and well (mother and father of Cousin Hockey Player), so HOSOB promises to let you even the score next time in the food eating contest.  You know that I need to know you’ve had at least one home-cooked meal a week.

Oh, and Cousin Hockey Player, I talked to your mother today.  Yes, I did.  But since you weren’t here last night, you’ll just never know about our conversation. Be there or be afraid.  Very afraid. (Ok, don’t be afraid; I didn’t rat you out as the incredibly hung-over Cousin in an earlier blog.   Ooooops.)

120 is a stretch, but I won’t accept any less than 90

My dad is 89 and 5 months.  As with young children, so, too, with the aged, the months matter.  89 is different than 89-1/2 which is different from 90.  The body ages as rapidly at that age as kids develop between the ages of 6 months and 3 years-old.

Today, after seeing my son’s Spring Festival performance, my father experienced chest pains, elevated blood pressure and dizziness and presented with a pallor suggestive of serious heart failure.  He had to be taken by ambulance to my sister’s hospital.  Of course, I knew that it had to be serious in order for my father to expose my son to this episode.  Still, as a mother, I thought, “you couldn’t catch a cab outside?”  Imagine my thinking my father should grip his heart in a state of distress and schlep out to Amsterdam Avenue to go to the hospital lest my 7.5 year-old child be exposed to trauma.  The power of motherhood is that you think these thoughts.  Fortunately, my psychotic moment gave way to remorse and the knowledge that if I didn’t repent, my mother — in Heaven — would send a lightning bolt to warn me to tread carefully.  (Our Seder theme this Passover is “where is there evidence of a loving G-d in the Hebrew Bible?”; however, wrath of G-d or Mom can really keep a person in line.)  Of course, my dad would never subject his grandson to trauma if he could avoid it.

My dad is ok.  I called my son (through his baby sitter’s cell phone) to tell him that Grandpa is okay.  “I was worried about Grandpa, E-Mom,” he told me, “but I really did a good job in the play!!”  I want to cry because my son can accept (and yet not understand) the simple and the complex simultaneously and in the same priority, in a way only children can (as long as they feel safe).

My dad has low thresholds of pain and discomfort so I thought this was one of those false alarms.  Still seething slightly from having my son subjected to an emergency, I kept in “radio-contact” with my sister, the doctor, who was in the ER with Dad, but I didn’t drop everything and run to his side, as I had done so many times before.  Then, all of a sudden, I thought, “I am being selfish and petty and he will die.”  As I was about to run up to the hospital, my sister called to say he was being discharged and it was something, just not a heart attack (even though my father is technically in heart failure).

I called Dad about 45 minutes later.  He was discombobulated; he hung up on me and then when I called back he didn’t realize what had happened.  I called my sister, who called him.  I waited.  I called again.  He was fine and he said, “I just spoke to POB [partner of blogger].  FOPOB [Father of POB] asked me to tell her that [insert random information].”  Ok, all is back to normal.  My Dad is my Dad.

SOB [sister of blogger] is calling BOB [brother of blogger].  Maybe he should come visit sooner rather than later.

When my Mom died in early 2003 at age 76, I made my father promise he would love until 120 (like Moses).  He would just have to make up the difference.  Life is unfair that way.  But I am starting to understand what that entails.  My father always tried to be there for his children, even if it wasn’t always what his children wanted or demanded or expected.  That is the way — we are the parents we always wanted to our children and our children will be the parent they always wanted to their children, and so on and so on.  Neither our parents nor we will be the parents that our children wanted.  That is the human condition.

If I relieve my Dad of his promise, will he think that he is dying?  Will he go more quickly because his promise is forgiven?  How can I tell him it is ok to let go when I really don’t want to lose him?  And it is not time for him to let go.  Life is more constrained than it was, but it is not the end game yet.

So, now I hope he makes it to 90 in good health.  Ok, Dad, just 90.  120 is negotiable.  But less than 90, that is a deal-breaker.  Are we clear?

Today’s Confession

So I must confess that while my sister-the-doctor was away on vacation, my dad did not go to the ER. My endless blogging and sturm und drang amounted to nothing (happily).

No one is more surprised than I. I lived with a sick feeling in my stomach all that week as I contemplated our usual ER protocol when Dad was feeling not so good.  Since he has always been healthy, the least discomfort would make him think the worst was going to happen. Add anxiety about my sister-the-doctor being away. Stir. Let simmer 5 minutes. Hop a a cab to the ER.

May this time was different because Dad really has a condition now. Maybe this time Dad wasn’t afraid of the unknown because he knows that he has something. And he doesn’t need to wonder if the least discomfort means this is it.

Anyway, my sister was happy to be home from her vacation. Me? I ran a victory lap around my office to the imagined cheering crowds.

The Dark Days

Life is eternal and love is immortal and death is only a horizon.  Or so says Carly Simon.  For a long time, I thought she was singing, “Life is a turtle,” and so did my son (hey, she sang eensy weensy spider, didn’t she?).  A little like my revelation about Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.

These are the days during which, each year, my sister and I re-live the final days of my mother’s life, seven years ago now.  For those who haven’t gone through this life-changing experience, all I can say is, may it be a long time before you know such pain.  That is a paraphrase of what one says when one takes leave of a mourner during shiva.  I would add, may it be a long time before you know such bewilderment and loss of place in world.  My father is still alive (thank G-d) so I don’t stand as an orphan (no joke, no matter how old you are, when your parents are gone, you are  an orphan).

I remember those days in razor-sharp color and in stark relief against the background of the mundane. Life is truly amazing when you are focused and grateful for the little things.

On December 13th (2 days after my mother’s 76th birthday), I had my sister paged in her ICU (which I had never before done and have never since) and told her that Mom’s health had fallen off a cliff and that she should just come to their apartment where I was waiting.

It is odd knowing that something has changed and that something set an irreversible course toward death.  I can’t describe what it was that made me know that we needed to gather the family (some of whom had to come from afar and make arrangements for child care).  I think my mother, the consummately considerate person, was signaling to me that we need to give everyone notice.  After all, my mother was the de facto matriarch of a far flung clan of family and friends.  All would want to come.  And all did (except her brother, who lives blocks away, but let’s not talk about that right now).

My sister and I were focused on Mom and Dad and the waning days.  We laughed and cried harder and took the conversations about life, love and loss with my mother with the extra gravity of knowledge being passed from one generation to another.  And, one full day before my mother lapsed into a coma, she gave each of her children her blessing over our current lives and her hopes for our futures.

I was so aware of my feelings and the existence of my mother in this world, in those dark days, and the stories she wanted to be told again and the memories she wanted to be re-lived as she entered the hereafter.  I remember the way she laughed until tears came when hearing old standards of family antics (even though I am scared that I can no longer actually remember her voice).  And, the way she produced my father’s and her ketubah (marriage contract) when my father averred that there was not one.  And, the way she smiled at her children’s disbelief that she and my Dad would take our uncle’s suggestion about a rabbi for their wedding (after all, he WAS a criminal defense attorney who had no synagogue affiliation).  And how the rabbi was imprisoned for kosher fraud AFTER they were married.  Yes, the Angel of Death hovered, but we had a few more days and we were going to love my mother and celebrate her legacy with her until the inevitable happened.

My mother (never one to hold back when she needed information) always refrained from satisfying her curiosity when there was no useful purpose.  In that way she was true to her Jewish roots of not entertaining idle gossip.  But, in these days, she asked questions merely to satisfy nagging puzzlements, like why did so-and-so have a white and peach theme to their wedding.  (In this particular wedding, groomsmen wore white tuxedos with peach-colored frilled tuxedo shirts.)  The beauty of these questions was that no one was really offended and, more importantly, she was at peace with life’s bigger questions, so she could indulge herself a little.  So, G-d will forgive a dying woman a little loshen hora especially if the people talked about were present to answer the questions.

She left us gently, having blessed us and having told us she had a good life.  A double blessing.

Everyday I miss my mother.  Everyday her memory is a blessing.  Seven years later, her death continues to transform my life and my world view for the better.  I am a kinder, gentler person and a more conscientious world citizen as a result of her life on earth and, sadly, her death.

Oh, Mom, I know that you had to leave because the pain and disease were too much.  And I knew you hung on months longer than was bearable (with all the pain) because you didn’t want to leave Dad alone.  You believed your children were strong enough.  And we are — you made us that way, but that doesn’t mean we don’t cry and want you here with us, now and for always.  Dad lives on, but only because he immerses himself in the memories of you and your shared love — a true love story in times of disposable relationships.

May you rest in peace.

Subject to Life

A friend and I are planning to have lunch tomorrow, “subject to life” as she cautioned in her email.

She and I have lost our mothers and are dealing with aging, failing fathers.  Some truths derive from these experiences.  One is that every plan or schedule is subject to life and what life throws at you.

Years ago, I thought I had some manner of control over my life.   Then my son was born and, shortly thereafter, my mother died. 

Only after my friend put it into words did I realize that that proviso, “subject to life,” modifies every plan anyone makes or obligation anyone undertakes. 

Because, one just never knows.  So, eat that dessert.

Perspectives

This weekend, my 45-going-on-85-year-old body announced that it was going on strike.

I had some bug that kept me in bed almost all Saturday and then Sunday, all ready to pack two days in one, I had a back spasm that had me on the floor in excruciating pain.  My son tried to make me feel better with many kisses and I was sad that he realized that his remedies were not efficacious.  It is heartbreaking when children grow up in these ways.

Nevertheless last night we had the ganza mishpocheh (the whole family) over for Sunday night dinner.

My father who has newly diagnosed heart disease looked good and was very excited to give us batteries and power bars and assorted other things that he bought at CostCo.  One opened in the city and he takes the bus there and buys in bulk and then doles out to the “kids”:  SOB (sister of blogger), HOSOB (husband of sister of blogger), POB (partner of blogger and) and B (me).  As he was telling us about the good deals he got on all of these items, he stood taller, had better color and didn’t look or sound like a man in heart failure.  It is crazy what a good deal can do for an old man who is the child of poor immigrants and raised in the Depression.

As I reclined on a chair in the living room with a heating pad strapped to my back, I marveled at my father’s energy.  The conversation reminded me of my father’s endless price comparisons.  For a time, he focused especially on the price of bananas.  If he went to Chinatown, where he uses a sculpture studio, he could buy bananas for X cents a pound, but on the East Side of Manhattan where he lives, it is X+10 cents a pound.  I tolerated the banana story for years and then finally — this was when my mother was still alive — I said to Mom, “The banana story has run its course.  Make it go gently into that good night.” Mom nodded knowingly and I knew that was the last I would hear about the price of bananas.  Mom had a way with Dad.

Sure enough, Dad never mentioned the banana story again.  But he did start talking about the relative price of salmon.  I let it unfold for a few years (mind you, it is the SAME story over and over again about saving a few cents on the price of a pound of salmon0.   By then, Mom was gone.  So I said to SOB, “The salmon story has run its course.  Kill it.”  (I ceased to be gentle about these things after my mom died.)

But last night, as I sat alternatively in pain and extreme pain because of my back, I listened to my father tell us the good deals he got on the batteries and the power bars and I looked at him — he looked excited, proud and decidedly not sick.  And, I thought, I can live with these stories for a few years.  Happily, even, as long as my dad looks as good as he did last night.

But, please, no bananas or salmon stories.

Thanksgiving 2009 — prologue

We’re having brisket instead of turkey  as a way to meld Jewish and American traditions (mostly, I am tired of having three people compete for only two turkey legs).  And besides the turkey legs, no one in our family really likes turkey.

Then what, you ask, will we eat for days after?  You mean, what will we do without having dried out turkey between two slices of bread to eat for a week?  hmmm.  A puzzlement.  How are we going to honor that post-Thanksgiving tradition?  A friend suggested turkey pastrami.  Brilliant. 

So, the Jewish descendants of pilgrims (the ones that came in through Ellis Island) will celebrate with brisket and turkey pastrami.  Culturally and gastronomically sensitive and sensible solution.  Some good things do come out of committee.

Lest you think that cooking a brisket is easy, let me share what happened prior to Passover, when POB (partner of blogger) was testing out her brisket recipe on our fathers at our usual Sunday night dinners.  SOB (sister of blogger) was unavailable that night, just when we needed her to referee the melee that ensued.  POB bought an uber-kosher piece of brisket with just the right “marble” enough fat to keep it from drying out.  First, let me say, it was a delicious brisket, notwithstanding what happened next.

Her father started to spit it out because it was too chewy and voiced his displeasure (what ever happened to if you don’t like it, don’t eat it and keep quiet?) and my father, trying to help, said, “[POB] dear, if you slice off the fat . . .. ” as POB’s face was getting red and her eyes are rolling back.  I tried to whisper to my dad that he should stop instructing on the finer points of brisket, but so sure was he that he was bridging the gap between POB and her father so that we could share a kumbaya moment that he continued.  It was a train crash that I could not stop.

Also, it is important to note that while my father thinks he has perfect hearing, it is only because he can’t hear the doctor tell him to get a hearing aid.  So, when I am “whispering to my dad” that is code for screaming at the top of my lungs.  Of course there were only the four of us at the table, because our son has excused himself and gone off to play.  So, everyone could hear everything.

Each day before that Passover seder, POB’s dad called to see if we had reconsidered the brisket.  For Passover, we bought two briskets, one really lean (and tasteless for the Grandpas) and a tender, marbled one for everyone else.  Everyone was happy and there were no plagues befalling anyone.

So, while Thanksgiving isn’t like being in Fallujah, we all wear body armor.

Kym Kardashian?

Ok, I am a little behind on the latest Reality (which is, as Lily Tomlin said, for people who can’t deal with drugs).  I thought the Kardashians were an alien species on Star Trek: The Next Generation.  Since there was a Star Trek craze this summer (spring?), it seemed on-the-edge of reasonable.

So, now I know they have nothing to do with Star Trek, although the little I have read about them suggests that they are IN FACT an alien species.

I don’t need to watch someone else’s reality.  Mine is hard enough to follow.

Family Caravan

So, my brother-in-law had an art show in the Hamptons.  I am the designated driver for three generations (we are all born and bred city dwellers).  I rented a Ford Expedition and I feel like Shirley Partridge carting everyone around.  (That reference will really separate the under-40-year-olds from their elders.)

My brother-in-law has been out for a few days installing the show, so my sister (his wife) was part of the caravan.

Three generations, ranging in age from 7 to 88, in one car.  Even coordinating rest room stops with each generation’s different “plumbing issues” would have been epic enough.  Three people each had a portion of the directions.  Sounds like a Dick Cheney staff meeting.  No, it was the quintessential “don’t-worry-about-it-I-know-what-I’m-doin’,” but I was the driver and I just followed orders.  My dad got us over the 59th Street bridge, my partner got us to East Hampton and my sister had the address of the gallery.  That was my sister’s stated rationale for being in the navigator’s seat — the gallery address — but, in truth, my partner was the true navigator although she was relegated to the back with child and father-in-law, G-d bless her.

My sister and I played a game of who caught Dad’s annoying behaviors first because we didn’t have cousin Bernie’s behavior against which to bet. I think we came out about even although at any point one of us was a few thousand dollars ahead.

I think my sister’s purpose in sitting in front with me (other than those already surmised) was to watch the speedometer and keep an eye on the “crazy drivers” as my mother called them.  At one point when I accelerated, I wasn’t sure if my sister was putting her foot to the floor as if to compel me to put my foot on the brake.  Driving with Mom, you could feel her right foot slamming on the passenger side floor.  (I must ask my sister about this.)

Anyway, we arrived at the show after slogging through Route 27 traffic.  My father’s interest lasted about 7 minutes.  My son’s lasted a good bit longer, I am proud to say.   But a 3.5 hour car ride for 7 minutes of viewing, lunch and then a jitney ride home is epic, especially an 88 year-old.

Artistes don’t sell their work in their lifetimes.  Since I love my brother-in-law and want him to be financially successful AND live a long time, I set about giving the hard sell to anyone who came into the gallery. After a few hours of trying to hard-sell in this economy, I joined my partner and son with my partner’s extended family, for an epic afternoon and evening.  I still need to process that experience before writing.

Grandma, Mom and me

So I am not only becoming my mother, I am becoming my grandmother.

You may remember seeing old Jewish ladies like her. They had heavy accents and would offer you a “gless of tea in a kup” (because in the “old country” tea was served in glasses, but “vee know that here, in Amerrrica, dahlink, vee poot tea in a kup”).

They carried heavy shopping bags full of things. In fact, those shopping bags were so ubiquitous that they were called “Jewish luggage”. Which gets me to my point. This morning, I couldn’t seem to find any of my fancy shmancy bags in which to shove some of the daily detritus of my life. I spied a small Dean & Deluca shopping bag (note to self: remind family that this is not a eatery for recessionary times). So in went my blackberries (yes more than one), gym clothes, bills I need to pay, etc. Off I went to my fancy shmancy job at my fancy shmancy office with my shtetl style bag.

Some things must just be in our genes. From generation to generation. . . .