Last week
my childhood best friend
texted a frayed thread of childhood best friends
that his mom had died.
The message before that said his mother was drifting
and that she loved us.
As his mom drifted, I drifted too.
Back to the cabinets
in that enormous house on Amory Street
full of Sunkist, Coke, Sprite,
Gushers, Fruit by the Foot, Fruit Roll-Ups,
Dunkaroos, Shark Bites, Soft Batch cookies, Hydrox,
every cereal box worth its weight in sugar,
and whole cans of black olives
bought especially for me,
pitted,
like everything else,
against my appetite
and losing.
Oh,
not to mention cable, video games, early internet,
basketball hoop in the driveway, tv in the basement, tv in the kitchen,
ping pong table, miscellaneous toys, multiple bathrooms,
and room to roam.
This was my second home.
An alternate domestic universe
where restriction was replaced
by just having the things that were restricted.
How odd to be able to access all the desires at once.
The distinction here being less about class
than about permission.
Permissiveness felt like freedom.
And everything felt like cavities.
My friend's mom sometimes called me her fourth child
as she squeezed me,
smoke on her breath,
and sent me on my way to my first home
with my sweaty dad and his bicycle.
Of all my friends' parents,
Marty was the one who knew me best.
Who was the most approachable.
Who took genuine interest.
Who championed me.
What a special feeling
—to be championed.
And what a strange verb.
We were morning people,
Marty and I,
who found each other awake
amidst the endless sleepers.
Anywhere else I was condemned
to pass silent hours in friends’ bedrooms
waiting for them to wake up.
But if I was at my second home
I could wander down
or wander up from the basement
and find Marty in the kitchen
watching the news in her robe,
or reading the newspaper,
happy to see me,
happy to feed me,
happy to talk.
It was rare
to be engaged so openly
and to have time with a friend’s parent
without the friend.
When her son and I began to untangle in high school,
Marty and I got fewer and fewer mornings.
Yet we arranged to have one
five years ago
at her son’s wedding in Dallas,
in the lobby of the hotel,
as the others slept.
We had coffee
and let a decade pass between us.
It was our last one.
When I texted my mom
that Marty had died
and that I missed her,
my mom texted back—
She adored you. You also brought her a lot a lot of pleasure.
I love you, sweetheart.
Ignoring what I thought was a typo, and not emphasis, I wrote back—
Thanks mom.
And thanks for letting me spend all of 5th grade at their house.
My mom added a thumbs up on top of my message.
We left it at that.
I think it's hard
to show gratitude
to the people who raise you.
And I remember as a kid
I had trouble understanding
that pitted meant the pit
is already gone.
the last morning in the lobby of the hotel broke my heart!
ReplyDelete<3 <3 <3 My condolences.
ReplyDelete