I quit my job. Two more days and I won't be employed. "What are you doing next?!" people excitedly ask me.
I don't know yet. I don't really know.
I landed my current job after landing an entry level job at the same company. It was early 2010 and I was finally finishing undergrad, after taking some time off to get back on track after that pesky divorce business. I had majored in Social Justice Studies with a minor in Feminist Theory. Right. Super marketable. But how I loved it, each and every moment of it! School had become my escape from a bad marriage, a place to hide, and luckily, that hiding place made me a better person. Not knowing what was next, I just wanted to find a job I didn't hate, and one that paid the bills. And there I was, an entry level customer service agent. And here I am, two and a half years later, an account executive, managing hundreds of thousands of dollars in my portfolio of clients. Sometime earlier this year I stopped and thought, Huh. How did that happen?
I remember that I had just started dating P. not too long before landing the gig. I told him excitedly about it as he made me breakfast one morning. He was waiting at my apartment after my second interview and we jumped up and down together when I told him I had been offered the job. He was there when I called my mom to tell her that I had just doubled my annual income. And through it all, both P and my mama kept reminding me that there was something else out there that I wanted.
My mother was a musician. She made her living doing this. When it came time for college, she didn't direct me practically, but told me to do what I loved. At eighteen, I loved a lot of things. I chose one. For a long time I thought my choice unwise. But now that I see it come full circle, that I'll be using those skills and interests and talents again in graduate school and beyond, I feel whole. Is that weird? I think of the broken self I was, trying to finish school, but how whole I felt, somewhere inside of me. Somewhere, I was storing all I was learning, there for a later time.
I think this is that time.
In the four months between two days from now and starting school in January, I am breathing. The past five years have been the most beautiful and most painful. I am cashing in all the summer breaks I never had, all the indulgences of arrested development I never took, and taking four months to be me. To figure out who I am, emerging from the first half of my twenties. To make sure I'm braced for the next crazy thing. (They're always around the bend.)
My sister-in-law is moving to Chicago this week. Today, we texted back and forth about her move. Of course, I couldn't help but remember my move to Chicago at her age. Walking home from the el tonight, a perfect city breeze guiding me home, I recalled my last night in my childhood bedroom. All of the furniture was packed in the moving van, ready to drive north early the next morning. I made myself a pallet on my bedroom floor and grabbed Ernie, the plush Sesame Street character I'd had since toddler-hood, and stretched out in that room one more time. The walls were bare and my bed was gone, and my books were packed. My mom knocked lightly on the door and pushed it in.
"You can sleep in my bed if you want, honey." I said I was fine, wanting one final night in my room. Looking back, I see now that she wanted one final night with me next to her, something she knew she'd never have again after that night, that she hadn't had in years. But she was usually good with boundaries. She knew what I wanted too, and shut the door.
I hope my sister-in-law does what she wants. I hope I continue to. I hope my mother would look at me again right now, take in the gravity of my decision, shut off my light, and close my bedroom door.
In the film The Wizard of Oz, one of Dorothy's first impressions of her new world is, "My! People come and go so quickly here!" I'm on a journey to process the comings & goings in my life, apple-throwing trees be damned.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Notes
I was never a good sleeper. Never. My mother said she thought it was because I spent so much time in the NICU after my birth, waking at odd hours to be poked, prodded, and monitored. Well into my young years I'd cat nap during the day and keep my parents up at night. It suited my system.
Because of my genetic joint disorder, I was in physical therapy from a very young age. I had a small trampoline for this, and even when the therapist had left our house, my youthful energy came to bear on the springs, my parents straining to hear Dallas or Matlock above my jumping. Many nights, I would actually jump myself to sleep. Fearing that they'd never get me back down, often my parents would just throw a blanket over me and leave me on the tiny trampoline for the night.
What I remember from those nights is waking and feeling a bit uneasy at first. I was slumbering on Jazzercise equipment, afterall. But as soon as my eyes adjusted and I understood that the cool, sleek bed on which I rested was my beloved trampoline, my rigid body went lax, and I stared up into the soft light from the lamp atop my mother's piano. I can visual the bottom metal base, under which we hid "emergency money," and I can see the little brass key that turned the thing on. I can see our living room alight, subtly, the spotlight shining though, of course, on the piano. It wasn't a fancy piano, but it was hers. And it was always part of what made houses into homes.
For years, I remember thinking that I had never felt at home the way I had felt in that living room under the glow of that lone light. My first apartment after moving out on my own, I chased it. And each home after it. I think I am getting close. Closer than I ever have been, anyway. But then I wonder if we ever find it again, or if we just create a new one for our children. One that we can never truly have, but just create for another person. Another light for another lifetime of chasing a light.
I wonder if I'll get her piano again one day. It still sits in her husband's house, unplayed, collecting dust, the music in it silenced for over a year now. I emailed him a list of the larger items I wanted, eventually. What I didn't want was for him to feel as if I was going shopping in his home. What I was really saying was, "If not for you, these things would be mine now, but when you die, this is what I want. Because they were always mine and never yours."
Because of my genetic joint disorder, I was in physical therapy from a very young age. I had a small trampoline for this, and even when the therapist had left our house, my youthful energy came to bear on the springs, my parents straining to hear Dallas or Matlock above my jumping. Many nights, I would actually jump myself to sleep. Fearing that they'd never get me back down, often my parents would just throw a blanket over me and leave me on the tiny trampoline for the night.
What I remember from those nights is waking and feeling a bit uneasy at first. I was slumbering on Jazzercise equipment, afterall. But as soon as my eyes adjusted and I understood that the cool, sleek bed on which I rested was my beloved trampoline, my rigid body went lax, and I stared up into the soft light from the lamp atop my mother's piano. I can visual the bottom metal base, under which we hid "emergency money," and I can see the little brass key that turned the thing on. I can see our living room alight, subtly, the spotlight shining though, of course, on the piano. It wasn't a fancy piano, but it was hers. And it was always part of what made houses into homes.
For years, I remember thinking that I had never felt at home the way I had felt in that living room under the glow of that lone light. My first apartment after moving out on my own, I chased it. And each home after it. I think I am getting close. Closer than I ever have been, anyway. But then I wonder if we ever find it again, or if we just create a new one for our children. One that we can never truly have, but just create for another person. Another light for another lifetime of chasing a light.
I wonder if I'll get her piano again one day. It still sits in her husband's house, unplayed, collecting dust, the music in it silenced for over a year now. I emailed him a list of the larger items I wanted, eventually. What I didn't want was for him to feel as if I was going shopping in his home. What I was really saying was, "If not for you, these things would be mine now, but when you die, this is what I want. Because they were always mine and never yours."
I don't have a photo of the actual piano. But I can recall the gold letters spelling out the brand, and I typed that into Google. This was literally the first photo returned in the search. As I said, not a special piano. But few things bring back such special memories. Few photos could bring back such vivid sounds and smells. The leather of the bench. The creak as the bench opened, storing the notes that scored my childhood.
Monday, August 6, 2012
The things she will not know
When my mother first died, I thought only in the abstract about the future. I couldn't fathom a real future without her in it, and all I had were vague conjectures and assumptions. I lamented the typical milestones that had not yet come to pass. She won't see me marry the love of my life. She won't see me become a mother.
At the time, nothing yet had happened to me without her, except for her death. And in the insane, rocking grief of those first weeks, I actually found myself upset and wanting to talk to her about it. Someone would say something ludicrous in an attempt to comfort me after her death and I'd think, Wait until she hears this. The people from my past who came crawling out for her funeral inspired a lot of, Wait until I tell her who I saw! This made me feel crazier, of course.
For the most part, I could only imagine the things I would experience without her. Sure, I would probably get married, but it wasn't certain yet. I hope to have children, but who knows? These were abstract. Now, there are real experiences. And she hasn't seen them.
Last week I learned that I was accepted into a graduate school. This is a program I have been looking at for 6 years. I spoke with her about it many times, actually. She encouraged me to apply, and I even started to once. It just wasn't the right time. Yet now it is and she can't see it.
I bought a new home. With my new husband. Every day he amazes me, the trust and love I have for him amazes me, and I just want to call her and tell her. I want to tell her I understand how she felt about my father, finally. I want to talk about paint colors and curtains with her.
My mother would take great joy in the simple things I was doing. I would tell her about a date, or a class I was taking, and she wanted to hear the minutiae. Sometimes after a really wonderful day I want to throw myself down on the sofa and call her.
I'm writing this and my husband is practicing the cello, and I know she loved that he played. I know that she would be delighted to know that I eventually lived in a house of music again, after growing up in one.
When I graduated from high school and college, my mother was there to see the ceremony. She was tickled over it. At the time, I thought it was silly. I rolled my eyes a lot. Since applying to grad school sometimes I can't stop thinking about the seat unfilled for me at commencement, the only person in my life who I expected to appreciate the mundane, even as I ridiculed her enjoyment.
At the time, nothing yet had happened to me without her, except for her death. And in the insane, rocking grief of those first weeks, I actually found myself upset and wanting to talk to her about it. Someone would say something ludicrous in an attempt to comfort me after her death and I'd think, Wait until she hears this. The people from my past who came crawling out for her funeral inspired a lot of, Wait until I tell her who I saw! This made me feel crazier, of course.
For the most part, I could only imagine the things I would experience without her. Sure, I would probably get married, but it wasn't certain yet. I hope to have children, but who knows? These were abstract. Now, there are real experiences. And she hasn't seen them.
Last week I learned that I was accepted into a graduate school. This is a program I have been looking at for 6 years. I spoke with her about it many times, actually. She encouraged me to apply, and I even started to once. It just wasn't the right time. Yet now it is and she can't see it.
I bought a new home. With my new husband. Every day he amazes me, the trust and love I have for him amazes me, and I just want to call her and tell her. I want to tell her I understand how she felt about my father, finally. I want to talk about paint colors and curtains with her.
My mother would take great joy in the simple things I was doing. I would tell her about a date, or a class I was taking, and she wanted to hear the minutiae. Sometimes after a really wonderful day I want to throw myself down on the sofa and call her.
I'm writing this and my husband is practicing the cello, and I know she loved that he played. I know that she would be delighted to know that I eventually lived in a house of music again, after growing up in one.
When I graduated from high school and college, my mother was there to see the ceremony. She was tickled over it. At the time, I thought it was silly. I rolled my eyes a lot. Since applying to grad school sometimes I can't stop thinking about the seat unfilled for me at commencement, the only person in my life who I expected to appreciate the mundane, even as I ridiculed her enjoyment.
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