Tag Archives: #deathandying

Memories…

What sounds worse – or better – from your perspective: 16 weeks or 4 months?

They mean the same thing, but to me, referring to something in weeks makes it seem…worse, for some reason.

Either way, weeks or months, this is the amount of time my mother has been gone.

I’m doing better. I know that because I’ve been having a lot of memories surface of all the horrible events I experienced as a kid when my mother was at the height of her paranoia and mental issues.

Although, she and my stepfather always denied she had any issues. He still does to this day.

In the grocery store the other day I was standing in the meat section and I glanced over and spotted a section devoted to baked hams. All of a sudden, an Easter Sunday when I was 11 shot to the front of my mind.

We were living in Staten Island, still in an apartment. My grandmother, my aunt, and my cousin were coming for dinner. This was the first time my mother had ever cooked for a holiday since she’d married my stepfather. His family never came to our home. Ever. We usually went to my grandmother’s apartment in Brooklyn, or my aunt’s, in Bay Ridge to celebrate a holiday or just visit.

How it came about my mother was the cook this year I don’t know. But my aunt was driving them in and my mother was in a tizzy about…everything. From the state of our apartment to the cook time for the ham, to her worrying something was going to happen to ruin the day.

Paranoiac foreshadowing? As it turns out, yes.

My grandmother made her displeasure known immediately when she walked through the door. They’d gotten caught in traffic on the Verrazano Bridge and she’d had to sit in the car for fifteen minutes without moving an inch. Of course, it was my mother’s fault for living in Staten Island – the old bitch made that evident.

Needless to say, things progressed downward from there.

No one ate the cheese and crackers appetizers my mother put out except for me. My grandmother commented several times that cheese was fattening and I was fat enough.

No one wanted a drink of the sparkling cider my mother had bought, except for me, and I wasn’t allowed. My mother thought it contained alcohol.

It didn’t, but she wouldn’t listen to me when I tried to read her the ingredients.

Now, our apartment building wasn’t the best-maintained place on earth and the appliances were all at that stage where they should have been replaced by the building management.

They weren’t. They were all the originals and had gone through about ten tenants by the time we moved in.

 My mother preheated the oven to the desired temp and when it was ready, placed the ham inside it in a roasting pan.

About ten minutes before it should have come out, the acrid odor of smoke wafted from the tiny kitchen. When we went in, you could see actual flames inside the oven through the glass door.

My aunt screamed, grabbed her daughter up in her arms, and bolted through the front door, heading for the hills, or in this case, the stairwell. My stepfather let loose with a string of curses and stood there scowling across the room at the oven, and my mother – with the forethought to grab potholders – yanked the oven door open, then pulled the roasting pan out with the flaming, on-fire ham in it. Instead of tossing it into the sink and running water on it to douse the flames, she tossed it out the window, roasting pan and all.

Why? A question she could never answer.

We lived on the sixth floor and our apartment faced the alley. The crashing sound of the metal roasting pan hitting the concrete pavement thundered up from the street level. We all went to the window – all except my grandmother and my runaway aunt, that is – to see the ham, still shooting flames. It had bounced from the pan to the top of a metal garbage can and landed with a thud.

Now, I neglected to mention it was raining buckets that Easter Sunday, which was the real reason for the traffic delay. Luckily, for my mother, it was coming down like crazy because the rainwater extinguished the ham after about a long minute of sitting on top of the garbage can lid, flaming.

I’m laughing like a hyena as I write this, but let me tell you, at the time it happened, no one was laughing, least of all my grandmother.

The old you-know-what screamed at my mother that she had ruined the holiest of holy days with her “stupidity.”

I remember asking, quite innocently, why she’d said that. My mother wasn’t stupid and it wasn’t her fault the oven caught on fire.

The backhand I got across my face shut me up quickly. My mother didn’t say or do a thing when her mother struck me. She just stood there, I believe, in shock.

My grandmother grabbed her purse and slammed out of the apartment, I assumed, to go look for my aunt. They obviously found one another, otherwise, my grandmother wouldn’t have been able to get home. She was never going to splurge on a taxi from Staten Island to Brooklyn – and remember: Uber didn’t exist in the 1970s.

I am still haunted by the utter deafening silence that filled our apartment after she left.

My stepfather cursed again and then started yelling at my mother that my grandmother was never welcome in his home again.

Silently, I said a prayer of thanks for that edict.

My mother, quietly, nodded, then slunk down to the kitchen table and dropped her head in her hands, and then began to cry.

My face was on fire – quite like the ham – from the slap. I remember being mad at my mother for not sticking up for me, but seeing her so ravaged with tears I did what I always did in situations where her emotions were overwhelming her, and sat down next to her and rubbed her back.

You can probably guess Easter isn’t my favorite holiday.

Those are the kinds of memories that have been surfacing for the past week or so. As I look back on them now, with an adult’s perspective, and through a mother’s eye, I realize several things I didn’t then:

  1. my grandmother was a psychopath
  2. she really hated my mother, and because I was her daughter, added me to the hated equation just because.
  3. my mother had deep-rooted mental issues, centering on abandonment, which manifested whenever situations became too overwhelming for her. She couldn’t protect me because she’d never learned how to protect herself.
  4. my stepfather was an enabler.

Kinda wish I’d known all these things as a kid, you know?

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thoughts…

Today marks two weeks since my mother passed away.

I’m still in the shock phase, to be honest.

How could I see her one day, and she be laughing, joking, and wishing everyone well, and the next, within twelve hours after being admitted to the hospital, be dead?

Right now that’s too much to think about, so I’m putting it someplace else. I will get back to it…someday. But not today.

Today I am remembering all the times she made me crazy in the ways only a mother can.

For instance, my mother was like that proverbial dog with a bone when a thought came into her head. The example I think about was when she’d call me in college and tell me to make sure I locked my dorm room door before heading out to class. She was always worried about people sneaking into my room to harm me. I could never understand why she thought this because I lived in a protected dorm. You had to sign in and sign out and approve all visitors. But she’d say it to me two or three times with every call and it made me nuts.

When I was in my forties I learned why.

My mother had been left alone one day when she was about eight or nine. My grandmother was out with my younger aunt and my older aunt wasn’t home. Someone knocked on the door – a neighbor man they all knew. Since he was well known to her, she let him in. I don’t really have to go into detail about what happened, do I? Suffice it to say, while she wasn’t raped, she was molested…something that gave her the greatest of shame in her young life and that she carried with her the rest of her life.

Knowing this explained her behavior, and I feel deep shame that I let her persistent worry bother me so much. She had a good reason to be worried – in her mind, at least.

Another thing she always did that drove me insane was ask a question of me and then immediately answer it. For instance, “How are you doing today? I bet you’re good.” Like that. Then she’d immediately go off on a ten-minute diatribe about the weather or any other topic she’d called me about. Drove me to distraction because you could never get a word in. One day a few months ago my daughter pointed out that I was getting like grandma. I asked how? And she said you just asked me a question and then answered it. We laughed about it, but in reality I was a little flustered.

Again, knowing why she did this explained so much to me. My stepfather is not and has never been what you’d call a talkative man. He is deeply quiet to the point you think he is mute if you don’t know him. Underlying depression had always been my diagnosis, but what do I know? I’m not a shrink. My mother was the alpha in the relationship. She would ask him questions or try to engage him in conversation, but most of the time he gave non-verbal answers. When I lived at home I didn’t notice this as much because she had me to talk to – or talk at, as the case is. But once they were empty nesters, his silence became obvious so it was up to my mother to keep the conversation going.

One of the nurses in the nursing home said she was a chatty Cathy. Well, here’s the reason why.

Today, I’m thinking of all the times I was short with my mother, lost my temper, or said things I really should have thought about before speaking. Guilt doesn’t come close to what I’m feeling right now.

I could have been such a better daughter. I could have listened more; not judged; been more tolerant.

I could have been…nicer.

I could have been…more loving.

Even saying all this I know my mother loved me above all else. She told me every single time she spoke with me.

Every. Single. Time.

One last thing that used to drive me cray-cray was that she never said Goodbye. At the end of every phone call or personal visit, she would say, “My love to you all.” I don’t know why it bothered me, but it did, so one day, about a year ago, I asked her why she always ended a conversation with me like that.

Her answer was, again, very enlightening.

My grandfather died, suddenly, of a heart attack when my mother was 9. He went off to work after kissing his girls goodbye and saying “goodbye” and then never came back home. Doesn’t take a genius or a psychiatrist to understand why the word was one she couldn’t bear to use.

There’s still so much about my mother and her life and her thoughts I don’t know. I’ll never get the answers now… I’m putting that one away someplace, too. It truly is too much to bear right now…

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