Friday, October 30, 2009

On ghosts, impermanence and osteoporosis

In 1990 I moved with my three-month-old daughter to Tallahassee, Florida, where I had gone to graduate school for a master’s degree in creative writing in the mid-80s. I had re-enlisted in grad school to get a Ph.D. because I figured if I was going to be a single mom, being a college professor was a wiser choice than working 12-hour days as a freelance journalist. My daughter’s father was having a temper tantrum because I’d gone and gotten myself pregnant against his express wishes. How I did that without his participation I’m still unclear about. But two years later Hank arrived in Tallahassee, too, with toys for his little princess and a check for me. I took him back.

My mom lived in Edenton, NC, by this time and we’d make occasional forays up there to visit. The drive from Tallahassee to Edenton took an eternity -- especially the one time we got off I-95 and decided to take the scenic route along Highway 17. Somewhere in an alternate universe a man and a woman are still on that highway with a little girl in the back seat, asking, “How much longer?” The parents automatically answer, “About an hour.” Our destination was always about an hour away.

My mother also came to visit us in Tallahassee at least once that I can remember. I know this because I have a picture.

My mother became old in fits and starts during the 1990s. Every time I saw her, I noticed some surprising new mile marker in the aging process.

On this particular visit I discovered she could no longer keep up with me when we walked anywhere. I found I needed to walk very, very slowly. Her heart, she explained . . .she had congestive heart failure. WTF? She never had anything wrong with her heart before. The past 20 or so years she’d been an inveterate walker. Walking was what we did together: long, brisk walks. That was her exercise, as well as a wonderful way for us to spend time together, to talk and laugh. And now all of a sudden (or so it seemed to me) we were cr-aw-ling. We’d become characters in a movie, moving in slow motion, each step exaggerated and excruciating as the world seemed to stop spinning in space. Of course, I hadn’t planned for this when I got her and Emmy in the car to go to the opera at the university. I carved out just enough time for us to speed over to campus, find a parking space and sprint to the opera hall. That was my normal M.O. I didn’t know there was a new normal in town.

Somehow we got to the opera before the curtain rose though I’m sure I had a mental breakdown as we moved with glacier-like speed along the sidewalk.

I kept thinking there was some way to “fix” my mother. At the time I had come across some “Tibetan rites.” The man who had gone to Tibet to discover them claimed they’d have old bodies dancing like teenagers. Oh, I was always onto something.

“Here, Mom, just do this,” I said. With my lithe 37-year-old body I demonstrated the rites in the living room of our little ranch house. Spinning was the first one. I got my mom to slowly spin three times. (You’re supposed to build up to 21.) She couldn’t do it. She was out of breath and a bright red blood spot suddenly bloomed in my mother’s left eye.

Shit, I thought, I’ve killed my mother. She’s had an embollism or something. She somehow survived my improvements efforts. Of course, she was a big disappointment to me, having gone and grown old like that. Where was my playful friend?

In the picture I have of her from that visit she is standing by the fountain in front of the auditorium at Florida State, wearing a dark velvet dress and holding the hand of four-year-old Emmy, who has one leg out in an arabesque and is balancing on the wall of the fountain. My mother is heavier in this picture than she had ever been before -- not fat, by any means, but solid, seemingly immoveable.

This is the last picture I have of my mother without a walker.

The Buddhists teach impermanence. An idea that still confounds me. In my mind my mother is permanently laughing and vigorous -- physically strong and intellectually at the top of the mountain. But right now, as I sit on my front porch on a chilly autumn morning, yellow poplar leaves carpeting the ground, I am aware of my own mortality slowly ticking away inside my body. My doctor has informed me that my bones have already begun the process of deconstructing themselves. One day my daughter will look at me in shock and dismay as I can no longer keep up with her. And I -- this I of this moment -- will just be a ghost in her mind.


3 comments:

Unknown said...

damn, you just made me cry.

~Easy said...

Getting old is hell. But it does beat the alternative.

Linda Angell said...

I remember watching my children walk out to the end of the driveway to catch the school bus and thinking, someday I'll remember this day. I do.

And I remember walking with my mother to the end of the same drive way wondering if it was the last time we would do that. It was.

Life is like a dream, so long in the moment and over too quickly. Now I see my children watching me and wonder what they are thinking.

I loved this piece. It spoke to me so personally.