what a bloody waste of time (a vignette)

(I wrote this a number of  years ago, but I can’t quite place it in time.)

Our son seemed to have been born with a predisposition to love grandparents. I don’t know how he came by it; could there have been a genetic cause, hardwired somehow into his wee neural net, passed down from his biological forebears?  Did it come from the books we’d read him as an infant and toddler?  My mind flips through the long lists of titles and book covers, but I can’t find any particular ones that might account for this.  It’s a mystery to me.

My parents had both crossed to the other side long before we’d ever adopted J, so it wasn’t about them, and my husband’s parents hadn’t provided the model of unconditional love and cuddles grandparents usually offer their grandkids.

Hell’s bells; I’m staring at that last sentence, wondering how to explain it.  It’s the crux of what I want to tell you about; but it’s hard on so many levels to sort through why that was, or why it may have been.

I wouldn’t even be compelled to tell you about any of it, at least right now except that J and A’s paternal Grandma died three days ago, and when we called them to tell them, J took it really hard. That’s a big chunk of the story, and it may be that some stories run backward in time; you just don’t know it when time’s marching forward, and people are being who they are, and doing what they do.

Stories about people have no real beginnings; dig deeper into a person, and you find that who they are, of course, had roots in the past: who their parents were, how they were treated, disciplined/punished, loved or not, taught things or not…what events shaped their lives; all of that and more.

I’ll just have to jump to the beginning I do know about, and lived with them…

Their first view of me came when they and their son (my now-husband) stopped by the construction site where I was working in Breckenridge, Colorado.  At the time, I was several stories up in an apartment complex building balcony rails: hard hat, overalls, leather tool-belt: every staid Midwestern couple’s dream daughter-in-law. (“Hey, ya wanna arm-wrestle?”)  Yep, an hilarious first-look, but I don’t think I even got to meet them then; they left town before I got off work and hitched a ride the seven miles home.

But over the years we got to know each other somewhat, and I became for them the woman who stole their son from them. Everyone knows the story; it’s about as cliché as it gets.  Both our families had histories of that: stories of generational pissiness and even abject cruelty visited upon daughters-in-law; not so much the sons-in-law somehow, at least in my experience.  And none of them thought to break the cycle.  How stupid.  Women dissed by their mothers-in-law going on to diss their daughters-in-law; hell; maybe it became generationally hard-wired somehow.  What a wretched thought.

So our families visited one another occasionally, but the tension was often thick, the time together was unsatisfying and largely symbolic.  They were big on symbols, and what their friends thought of them mattered greatly.   They counted visits to their house as they counted gifts: markers to indicate how much they were valued by their kids, I guess.  We failed the tests here and there, although we did try. We just wanted more, especially in terms of honesty and emotion, and working things through.  The Nebraska way seemed to be: don’t disagree; that means fighting; if you stuff it, it’s all good; and if you bring up an issue, you’re a troublemaker. There was a list of things ‘not to be discussed at the table during meals’, politics and religion being the top two.  Egad; okay then.  Everybody forgot once in awhile; I swear I wasn’t the only one!  When sister-in-law told us at the dinner table that friends of theirs had just returned from (still apartheid) South Africa, and had told them that ‘it wasn’t really that bad’, it was a bloomin’ miracle that Mr. wd and I even kept our seats, rather than rise and yell: “Oh, yeah?  Not that bad for the white people, you bloody idiot?!”

Anyway, we had committed one other major sin, although we hadn’t known it at the time.  We got married on the spur-of-the-moment, which meant no big wedding, which we didn’t want, plus we lived about a thousand miles away from mom-and-pop-in-law.  We got married in a park in Steamboat Springs at lunch time, so a few our friends could be there.  A Universal Life minister in lederhosen and knee socks had officiated.  The train came by and interrupted the vows; still, the marriage seemed to take. Our brother-in-law ate his sandwich during the ceremony; the whole thing was so like us…a little bit clunky and a little bit funny…

We managed a few visits to each others’ houses over the years, and tried to keep up with their expectations of us, except for wanting to talk problems through.  We were for it, they weren’t, and that made for some rough spots.  They had lists of grievances about me; we tried to ignore them.  Christmas was always an issue; their Christmases sucked; my mother willed me her uncontrollable love of that holiday, and I wanted our own.  That was worth about sixty demerits right off the bat.

We eventually adopted kids, both of color.  Without drawing it out, there were some hints about discomfort with our ethnically-different kids; you can guess how discouraging that was for us.  “We haven’t told Grandma Davis J’s black yet;” creepy things like that.  I suppose it wasn’t that they were racist, just ignorant, and only used to white people.  But neither Grandpa nor Grandma gathered the kids in the way most grandparents might, and Jordan, especially, noticed.  But still, before every single visit, Jordan’s face would light up in anticipation of seeing them.  He talked about them in an idealized way, as though he saw some thought form for Grandparents in his mind; a touchstone of sorts, signaling absolute love and connection.   His sister, two years younger, was more practical.  She knew her birth family; we saw them when she wanted, but it was very seldom; and in truth, they were pretty messed up.  That was why she was taken from her birth mother and lived with us, of course.  A couple times after their visits, J would ask his sister A, “Which one did you like better?”, meaning which of their grandparents.

She’d say, “Andy the poodle; but he’s really pretty boring.”  And he was.

At some point, it became more important for my husband to work things through with his parents; he asked hard questions they wouldn’t answer, and resented strongly.  He’d been in therapy, and discovered a need to communicate with them.  Now Grandpa, it turned out, loathed shrinks; feared shrinks. He didn’t want anyone seeing into his psyche, thank you, nor his son trying to remember his childhood.

So they began to avoid us.  Twice they were on Colorado trips to see the kids (Mr. wd’s sister lives in NW Colorado, we’re at the most southern end of the state), and passed us by at the last minute, citing car trouble, or stomach flu or something.

In the end we worked out a system of visits wherein we’d drive half-way north in the state, they and his sister’s family would head south, and we’d get some motel rooms for the visits.  It worked, but the noisiness and meals and whatnot precluded personal exchanges.  For two other visits, we’d driven all the way to his sister’s house for visits; and his father wouldn’t even hug him hello. Grandma would just be her arch self, and talk about the weather, and stay busy preparing the meals, but at least all the grandkids got to play together.

And still Jordan pined for family, especially Grandparents; as he got older, he realized this was it. He went through a time when he really wanted to find his biological father; I tried online searches, and wrote a lot of letters, but unhappily never had any luck.  His biological mother had our address, but never made contact, which also hurt him to know.

Three years ago Grandma was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s; no one told her that’s what was wrong with her; we figured she had a right to know, but it wasn’t up to us.  Around the same time, Grandpa had a heart attack, and had quadruple bi-pass surgery.  It was the Big Uh-oh moment; they needed help, and NOW.  I spent the next few weeks finding help online and by telephone for home health care and meals and cleaning help, which Grandpa resisted like the stubborn fool he is.  Circumstance, plus some frank talk finally got him to accept help from the government. He was ninety by then, and not able to cope; the programs we found were really helpful for both of them for a time.  But eventually it became clear Grandma needed to be in a nursing home; it was the hardest decision of his life.

Mr. wd went to Nebraska to help with logistics and to repair things around the house that had been left undone for years.  A reverse mortgage plan required extensive repairs, and he did them.  I stayed home and hunted for nursing homes that would accept Medicare/Medicaid.  Oh, the irony of helping these folks who didn’t like us…but what are you going to do?  You do what you’re supposed to do; all of us go through it in life.

They finally settled on one, and moved Grandma there; Grandpa visited her twice a day for months.

J began to go to Grandpa’s to help out after hot-shot firefighting seasons ended.  He was strong, loving, and helpful.  He’d graduated with a major in history, and loved to pump Grandpa for stories from the war and other parts of his life.  Grandpa ended up liking him; respecting him; and probably loving him. Jordan visited Grandma in the nursing home.  He didn’t know she wasn’t quite Grandma; he did think it was funny, though, that in her Alzheimer’s state, she’d forgotten she hated his mom. That killed all of us.  Ah; the benefits of dementia!

I’d send her cards of my bird and other wildlife photos; she’d tell me on the phone about some unknown, but lovely person who’d send her bird cards every week!  It really was pretty sweet.  In her mind, I was married to her other son, and lived in the downstairs of her house, so we’d yak about all that; hell, what was the harm?

One evening J called from ‘his room’ downstairs; he was in a bit of shock.  Grandpa had told him that he regretted being such a fool and missing getting to know him for all those years. I’m in tears now reading that sentence.  And I was left wondering: Could the old fool say the same thing to his son one day? God, I hoped so.

Just a few weeks ago, Grandpa decided he wanted to come to Colorado one last time.  Mr. wd’s sister schlepped him from Lincoln, and together they shuttled him around the state visiting relatives; he stayed here for a few days.  The oddest thing happened: he seemed to decide we weren’t so bad after all…

He wanted to read things I’d written; he wanted, after years of not having wanted to, to see some of the fine building projects in the valley that Mr. wd had created, although not one compliment escaped his lips; but still, even that was progress.  He loved the foods I prepared for him, the flower garden, and baskets of goodies I sent home with him.  It was fucking crazy: he’d even let me tease him! I called him Old Man; the kids and I call Mr. wd that, too.  He’d had an aversion to that term forever; oh yeah!

“Shoot; if you’re not old at ninety-two, when the hell do ya get old, Old Man?” I’d crowed, and he finally laughed, too.  I forget which teasing of mine provoked it, but he even left a buck’s worth of quarters under his pillow for me the morning he left.  His first-ever Wendy-prank! He later loved that I knew what the coins meant!

Three nights ago one of the mountains just east of us caught on fire; the winds were fierce, and sky was molten and the plumes were lit by the fire below.  We went to bed with just a bit of anxiety, but the fire was far enough away that there was no true danger.

In the night, the phone rang.  I was busy dreaming, and it answer-phone picked up.  There was Grandpa’s voice plaintively wailing, “S…pick up the phone…S…please pick up the phone. He told Mr. wd that Grandma had just died.

Oh, what exquisite relief!  She’d been sound physically, and her forebears lived to ungodly ages.  It looked like she could last another decade with no sweat, and Grandpa wanted to survive as long as she lived; he couldn’t think how any of us could reasonably care for her or visit her.

Apparently the hospice nurse said she’d been sick with stomach flu; she slept eventually.  When they went in to check on her, she apparently sat up in bed, and died.  Good job, Mabel; good job, God…or gods…Godspeed Mabel…your suffering’s over.

We called our son at first light; he cried.  “I’ll never get to know her now.”  (No, and you wouldn’t have in any event, honey; and believe me, her last year was  the best version ever of Grandma. The nursing home staff said even she had developed a sense of humor; fancy that.)

J’s hotshot crew boss was kind enough to give him time off to go to the funeral; he’d even sent flowers and greens from the hotshot crew.  That made me cry; that Cranky-boss was such a Human Being around it all.  Steve drove 500 miles to pick him up, and together they drove another 500 miles to Grandpa’ house and hordes of relatives.  Is it possible that there might be some intimacy there this time?  Some hint of real connection and love?

Let me dream of it; okay?  (Clap with me if you believe in fairies…)

I’m clapping like crazy in my heart and my mind; come on, you fools.  Get real with each other.  Please.

What a goddam waste of time all those years of wasted enmity and separation were; it’s just making me cry.  Again.

Sting wrote this after his father died (in part):

Dark angels follow me
Over a godless sea
Mountains of endless falling,
For all my days remaining,
What would be true?
Sometimes I see your face,
The stars seem to lose their place
Why must I think of you?
Why must I?
Why should I?
Why should I cry for you?
Why would you want me to?
And what would it mean to say,
That I loved you in my fashion?
What would be true?
Why should I?
Why should I cry for you?

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a waste of time, it's what we do best.

Two years ago I went to visit my parents, Pops on his way out(been going for ten years!), Christmas two days hence. No heat in my truck,three hundred miles from home for work, eight hundred miles to the folks from work; Cali, Nevada, Utah, Northrn Az. Missed the alien highway turnoff, went two hundred miles out of my way, damn near froze to death from hypothermia.
Upshot is, I told pops I love him and th crusty old buggah had the nerve to ask me Why? My answer?
'Cause my heart told me so.

The Doors ad it right, people are strange.

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Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .

Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .

If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march

wendy davis's picture

@Tall Bald and Ugly

vignette, amigo! goddam, what a heartfelt blessing you laid on that crusty old codger! that need must have been what propelled you those 1500 miles with hypothermia, don't you think?

my stars; your loving-kindness (do we assume after former...adversity?) made my morning, as did a comment at the café. thank you; i doff my cap before you, not tall, bald and ugly. your inner light must show thru in your visage. just a guess, but when your pop's ride does come for him, your love will help ease his way into the 'scalding, aortal light' (mary oliver).

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The night of the 27/28 he Went!
I had left on the 26 to go back to work, traveled the alien highway going back and almost ran out of fuel . @wendy davis
something they tell you Not to do.
Pro tip; going westbound the last fuel stop is ten miles Before they have the sign posted. Is definitly a smart idea to top off there. The Shell station on the corner.

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Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .

Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .

If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march

wendy davis's picture

@Tall Bald and Ugly

it just goes to show...it's always something, isn't it? if it's not one thing...it's another.

[video:https://youtu.be/9hYGtXIqDa0?t=122]

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Granma's picture

That has stayed with me. "Most people are doing the best they can." That best may vary over time or from day to day, of course. I remind myself of that when behavior of others makes no sense to me, and somehow it helps.

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wendy davis's picture

@Granma

and i really never have believed it. too many simply take the road most (and too easily and unmindfully) traveled, rather than the necessary ones less traveled. i remember long ago having asked my (now-estranged) elder sister if she ever consulted her inner life, inner guides, to check out what her dark side portends what she does in life, who she hates (blacks, the underclass, and LGBT for starters) and if so, she might want to heal, do gentle battle with it.

she shrieked, literally, that no, she didn't believe in all that, and that her hubbie always tells her that she's 'very low-maintenance'. i suppose i tended to go for mental health to those of the body/mind persuasion who reckoned that we can all change...if we'd like to, or even have the incentive to.

but as for your construct here:

I remind myself of that when behavior of others makes no sense to me, and somehow it helps.

...yes, if you're speaking more in general terms, rather than family members who'd eat your soul or spirit for lunch due to habit, greed, authoritarianism, and so forth, i can see where it would be a useful way to wax philosophical than take it too personally to heart, or be wounded by it.

thanks, granma, for that reminder.

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wendy davis's picture

@Granma

i should weigh in on that aphorism, especially when offered by a shrink. and yet...here i am...

but i began musing that for one thing, i'd guess said shrink has his own unresolved issues, as far too many do. flipping thru my mind's rolodex concerning the many shrink friends and acquaintances i've over my life, added to the many our daughter had gone to over her life...i'm mindful that many were the 'patch 'em up, let 'em out the door happy' so they may come back. doctor feelgood...until the next time.

talk therapy with probing and intuitive questions can be painful in so many ways, including what parts our dark sides may have unwittingly played in our neuroses, but even just remembering the truths of histories with our families can be hard, especially those we weren't able to admit to ourselves. i find it instructive to look at family photos with deep scrutiny, and as if they were all strangers, and ask: what are their bodies and poses actually saying? what's that clenched fist about? or that gunslinger's posture? or why isn't that family able to be within spittin' distance to one another?

one thing i'd like to note, and believe strongly: good shrinks don't offer advice. they ask, actively listen, and ask again. for most will come to epiphanies eventually, and actually heal and choose the self-directed advice to give themselves.

ah, well, i should hush now, although i could write reams on this stuff. ; )

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travelerxxx's picture

I really like reading your vignettes. It's a break from the usual politics, people, and craziness and, almost like a roomful of mirrors, opens up to us other politics, craziness (or not), and people.

Never a waste of time.

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wendy davis's picture

@travelerxxx

buster keaton. ; ) i imagine that telling some of the truth of dysfunctional families might even cause others some introspection, and even signal: you're not alone. in the end, it finally occurred to me (well, duh) that the reason i'd thought to reprise this is that our son was coming here yesterday. and yes, the prodigal son drove 500 miles to return.

it's been interesting talking about these old days with him, and he's been filling us in on the updates of mr. wd's family he'd met again at a memorial service for his great aunt in western nebraska. sounds as though there's a third generation of horror shows popping: the roles have been assigned, and are being acted out. whooosh. the christianists slay me the most, of course.

who will stop the generational dysfunction? only the brave or desperate ones. ; )

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WaterLily's picture

@travelerxxx Was offline for the last four days, and returning here, I read first hecate's story, and then yours.

Both very good for the soul in different ways, and good reminders of the value of ... valuing ... others.

And also, an excellent break from politics. I'm going to pretend it's Lent or something, and give up following the horse race. It's bad for my psyche and demeanor.

Thanks for writing and sharing this. *heart*

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wendy davis's picture

@WaterLily

either (singularly rare), until briefly yesterday, so thanks for the tip on hecate's piece. i agree in that i'm even weary of seeing the headlines on the quadrennial circus, so your 'giving it up for lent' sounds just right to me. ; )

best heart to you, amiga, and thank you for commenting and appreciating.

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