MOTHER
My
mother was attractive, intelligent and athletic. She studied
diligently as a youth and continued her education in college and then
received a Master’s in education in 1937 from Washington State
University. She taught school in a one room school house and
then
became a county extension agent in Pacific County and taught poor
farmers how to make mattresses and developed this business for farmers
into a cottage industry in South Western Washington. She
loved to
dance and ski and entertain. I believe she and my father
loved
each other very much and once the war was over all she could think
about was having a family. Then she gave birth to my sister,
me
and my brother and we never got to know that woman ever.
The
mother I knew was constantly cleaning our house, getting us ready for
school or making dinner. She was the most obsessed Operations
Manager you will ever know.
She
wore herself out and was constantly on uppers and downers just to get
through the day. I loved my mother very much as a child and
thought I was part of the reason she became sicker and
sicker. I
remember her working incredibly hard to show the outside world that our
family was “working” and day would turn into day and we wore clean
clothes and the house was always immaculately spotless but inside our
hearts were broken. I was the kind of kid who needed a
confidant
and my mother was not available.
She
checked out very early every night most often before we kids went to
bed and woke up at 5:30 and started cleaning the house and making
breakfast and starting the cycle all over again. The broom
closet
in my mother’s home was cleaner than most people’s dinner ware.
As
a small child you don’t know what is going on in the heads of your
parents because they are such giants and you need to organize you life
300along with theirs to survive but with each passing year my mother
became more distant and less present in our emotional lives.
My
mother, being Scottish, loved to cook and feed us in a very economical
fashion. On Sunday we would always have Pot Roast and mother
would wrap all of the leftovers in tin foil and then on Monday we would
have the good leftovers. She would then wrap up those leftovers in even
more tin foil and then re-cook the leftovers for Tuesday
night.
By Tuesday night the pot roast was pretty awful and that is what my
little ten year old heart was feeling like. All wrapped up in
tin
foil and pretty dry around the edges.
The
pain of the emotional loss of my mother was catching up with me the
older I got.
I
wanted so badly to be loved by her that every day that I wasn’t
embraced by her love was another day I was very mixed up inside.
At
times mother would travel to medical clinics for treatment.
She
had a poorly done stomach operation when I was young and she became
quite a hypochondriac seeking treatment for problems that she had from
the operation as well as problems she thought she had. She
was
also was in great need of emotional help for her distress that she
wasn’t getting from my father or anyone else and I believe she at times
checked into mental hospitals when her depression became too much to
bear. I never really knew what happened when she was gone
because
as a family we never talked about where she was going or what
treatments she was having. She was just gone.
Denial was
the rule. Maybe if we didn’t talk about the problem it would
go
away. All I wanted in life was for her to come home and be a
loving, in your life, mother like the other kid’s seemed to have and be
swooped up in her arms and told that I was the best and her love would
protect me from all of the monsters in the world.
I
remember once when we picked her up at the little Omak airport, a
friend of my father must have flown her in from a Spokane hospital in a
small private plane, that I was so excited she was coming home early
and I really believed that she was fixed and our lives would magically
transform into a wonderful happy family. When she got into
the
car she was still very groggy from all the drugs and possible electric
treatments she had received that my mother hardly recognized
me.
The entire ride home I was scared she was going to die and I started
tapping on the door handle believing that if I tapped that door handle
enough times it would wake her out of her
stupor and fix her forever. I remember sitting in the car out
in
the driveway after my parents had gone into the house still sitting out
in the car tapping that door handle hoping I got the magic number of
taps on the handle to fix my mother before I came into the house and
tried to start our family life all over again. Unfortunately
I
didn’t get the right combination of taps made to make my formula
work.
As
I said every day this estrangement from my mother lasted I was in a
deeper tailspin of confusion and unhappiness. I couldn’t sort
out
my problems and I was becoming tremendously accident prone.
The
accidents were probably my unconscious mind trying to get my mother’s
attention and to force her to shelter me for at least long enough for
the danger of the accident to pass. As I became older,
thirteen
or fourteen, I began to realize that my mother was never going to stop
being so emotionally detached from me and I knew I had to find a way to
survive emotionally to grow up. So I guess that is when I
began
the process of fooling myself into believing I could get by without my
mother’s love in order to cope with the world around me.
As
a child I was always worried that it was me who had broken my
mother. I was too loud or too needy or misbehaved so badly or
had
too many problems and this caused her ability to love back to be broken
by my carelessness. One of my uncles helped this worry along
during a summer vacation. My brother and I were always being
sent
around to the relatives during the summers and we thought it was
because our parents wanted us to get to know our cousins
better.
Funny though we always went to visit the cousins and they never came to
stay at our house. One summer night when we were staying in
Oregon my uncle thought I was out playing with the other kids
but
I had come inside and gone upstairs to grab another baseball mitt when
I heard the grown ups talking down in the kitchen. I quietly
scooted down the stairs where I could hear them but they couldn’t see
me. I was curious because I kept hearing my name being
brought up
so I wanted to find out what the grown ups were talking
about. I
came upon the conversation just as my uncle was getting to the
point. He told his friends, who were gathered in their
kitchen
that night, that the reason my brother and I were there was because we
were too much for my mother to handle and the family was worried that
my mother was going to have a mental breakdown if she didn’t get away
from us boys for long stretches at a time during the summer.
My
heart sunk on that night and I wanted to yell out to everyone that it
was her choice to act this way and I was just a kid like any kid and it
wasn’t my fault she was going crazy. But I didn’t.
I
quietly went out the back door and walked out into the yard and cried
my heart out. I was thankful that my uncle had brought this
problem out into the open and he was right my mother did need a break.
It was on that night that I knew I had to find a new way to sort out my
emotions. I would stop bothering my mother and give her some
relief from me and begin to sustain myself without being needy of her
love. I would love myself. That was quite an
existential
load for a kid of thirteen. It was scary not to have any
emotional backup but it seemed better than going to my mother with my
problems.
I
began to establish another set of made up ways to meet my emotional
needs. I worked harder at being charming so I never got into
situations where I really needed a mother’s love. I got very
good
at reading other people to see which way their moods were swinging and
what social conditions were being played out so I could always be a few
moves ahead of them so that I could escape having trouble with
them. I became everyone’s friend but never too deep a
friendship
because I never had an innate sense of being secure with what kind of
person I was. I didn’t have a mother telling me I was special
and
I could do anything I wanted to in life. And when denial or
avoiding problems as they came along didn’t work I would retreat into
my inner self and read books and wander off on my own in my own world
until the coast was clear. You see I had a multi-layered
approach
to emotions it’s just that they were all made up responses instead of
just having real feelings. No one was there to push me into
becoming the “special person” inside me or at least someone to say
you’re pretty good at this you should do more of it. No one
was
there buying me a book and saying you should read about this.
My
mother went to bed at 7:30 and said goodnight. I am thankful
that
my father would at least blow through my life from time to time with
some real emotions or I would have probably never felt another real
emotion growing up
Mom,
I only wish I had stopped you on one of those many nights when you were
going to bed before I even started my homework and said I love you and
I miss not spending even a moment with you. Why don’t you
stop
working so hard and let’s go for a bike ride or go to ice cream shop or
come to my school and see me in a play or watch the band give a concert
and oh by the way I play the trombone and maybe you could watch me play
little le243ague baseball I really like being a second baseman or how
about throwing a snowball at me or let’s go to the school carnival and
be in the cake walk or buy a straw hat or go to the movies and eat
popcorn or hey I want to be on the debate team
or
I’m going out for football what position do you think I would be good
at or I think I might like to be a lawyer when I grow up or my sister
is going out with boys who drive shiny cars and what’s that all about
and do I really have to do my homework because I want to go to college
but I don’t want to work that hard. But I never did ask those
questions I just decided to live in a peaceful coexistence with
you. As long as my mother didn’t embarrass me too much I
pretty
much tried to not bother her. She needed to go to bed 243at
7:30
because she could find no other way to numb the pain. I was a
little more creative. I just made up my emotional
life.
Even though my new emotional system was a house of cards waiting to
tumble it was what allowed me to go on with life with some semblance of
emotional stability. I wasn’t taking uppers or downers to get
through the day. I was just letting a limited amount of
feelings
to register. Just enough emotion to fool everyone into
believing
I was going to be ok.
Agnes
MacLean in another time or place could have lived a very rewarding and
memorable life. She was smart and pretty and probably
adventurous. I once started writing a seafaring adventure
story
set in the Dalmatian Islands in the 1930’s and I immediately saw my
mother as the heroine 243of the tale. I guess deep down I
wanted
to see her come back to life as the woman she could have
been.
I’m
sorry mom if it was me who broke your will. But I think the
truth
is that at some point living with dad was just too dysfunctional for
you and you decided to slog it out through the rest of your life
instead of working things out. Rather than express what was
the
problem you decided to turn off your feelings because they were just
too much to deal with and somehow get through the day. Thank
you
for taking care of me and making sure I got to school on
time. I
only hope in the next life to be we can work on the other stuff.
Love, little Charlie.