The Night Time Stood Still

It was twenty days after my 50th birthday.  January 19, 2013 at about 9:00pm.  That was when my adopted mom, Guynell, died.  She had “adopted” me in her heart years earlier when I was in college.  I remember after she died, walking outside on that chilly night, waiting for the coroner to arrive at the home.  I was struck by how large the world suddenly felt and how small I felt in comparison.

My biological family was dysfunctional, hostile and demeaning.  So, when Guynell “adopted” me and became the embodiment of parental love in my life, my heart was overjoyed.  We had a special connection, because she CHOSE to love me, when my mother could not muster anything more than mere ownership of me.  Guynell did not HAVE to … She WANTED to.  For a young female who had been repeatedly told I was the greatest disappointment in the life of my parents, this love was treasured and overwhelming.

She had three biological girls of her own and naturally did maternal things.  She made sure I had a stocking on the mantel each Christmas.  She sent birthday cards, Christmas cards and “just because” cards.  She told me she was proud of me. She was interested in me and my life.  She remembered things that were important to me.  She listened, intent on hearing, when I talked to her.  She gave of herself, her heart and her time.  She was a safe harbor.  She not only told me she loved me, but unwaveringly acted on that love in practical, measurable ways.

To have Guynell as a guide into young adulthood was a game changer.    At a time when I was uncertain of how to be an adult and was grasping for a true north, she became a consistent constant in my life.  Guynell saw her girls, myself included, through a realistic lens.  She knew each of our short comings and she knew our strengths.  In her infinite grace, she focused on our strengths and generally any “ask” she had of us was strength based.  She expected her girls behave in a respectable, kind, honest and Christ-like manner.  However, when one of us fell short, we were met with nothing other than grace and love.  Consequences of poor choices might very well be forthcoming, but we always had her love and support to navigate those bumpy paths.  She always made sure we understood the difference between a disappointment in a specific behavior or choice and a disappointment in us as humans.  We all behaved in ways, at one time or another, she wished we had not; but her love never changed.

She had an infectious smile, a positive attitude and a compassionate heart.  When she took her last breath on that January night, I was genuinely relieved her suffering was over, but I felt so small.  So insecure.  So alone.  It was as if my world stopped momentarily and time stood still.

Being listed as her daughter in the obituary was one of the most cherished honors of my life.

Little did I know Guynell’s death would be the first of many emotional hits coming my way …

Oil and Water

I was born in Mississippi, on the cusp of the civil rights movement.  My first trip around the sun began the morning of December 31st.  I arrived to mixed reviews.  The paternal side of my family, convinced I was conceived prior to my parent’s wedding, were primarily thankful I was born 9 months and 7 days after the nuptials.  As their first and only grandchild, the maternal side of the family thought I was a gift from God who completed their world.  My parents viewed me more as a possession or an accessory, and to this day will tell anyone who asks, my greatest accomplishment in life was being a much-needed tax deduction the first year of their marriage.

My parents did not give much thought to being parents, which was clear by the fact I spent the first several months of my life sleeping in an opened dresser drawer and not a crib.  They believed the important things would come naturally, what did not come naturally they would wing and a nanny could be hired for everything else.

My mother stayed with me the first several weeks of my life.  But as time passed, my father gave her an ultimatum; go back to work or be a divorced, single mother at 22.

My parents discovered they had differing opinions on a multitude of things, many of which were important, basic tenants of their personal belief systems.  I imagine this happens with great frequency when two people do not know each other very well.

My father was the “rebound” person for my mother.  My mother had dated a man she deeply loved for 5 years.  When she heard he had supposedly been unfaithful to her with one of her best friends she immediately broke things off with him without discussion.  A few months later, she met the man who would become my father.  They dated for 3 months, became engaged and married three months later.  My maternal grandfather begged her not to marry my father, but my mother is a prideful woman and was convinced she knew best.

My knowledge of this story happened in a rather peculiar way.  I was about 13 or 14 years old and my mother asked me to get something out of her wallet.  I went to her purse, picked up her wallet and began looking for what she needed.  I came across a black and white wallet size professional photograph of a rather handsome young man in a suit and tie.  I asked my mother who the man was and she told me his name; but insisted I not mention him or the picture to my father.  I later asked my maternal grandmother about the man and she told me the story.  When telling the story, she seemed sad.  She said she never believed he was unfaithful, and if he was, he stood accused of only one kiss.  As she shook her head she said he was a good, kind man from an upstanding family.

My parents could not have come from more different backgrounds.  My father was raised as an obligatory Catholic. My paternal grandparents married when my grandmother was 13 and my grandfather was 18.  Until the shock and dismay of their elopement wore off, they rented a small attic space from a man in another town.  My grandmother was later diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic and her husband was a philandering, evil man who taunted her.   Their home, often, was the staging area for shouting matches, derogatory remarks, emotional manipulation and exhaustive monologues about how unfair the world was to them.  They were ungrateful, stingy people with dead eyes who viewed humanity as a commodity.

There were three children born to this union and my father was the youngest and the only male.  My father was a momma’s boy and due to his gender and birth position he was the apple of her eye.  He was an average child by all accounts.  There was nothing in his life at which he excelled.  He did not play sports.  He was not musically interested or inclined.  In a good year, his grades were average and most years he would slide by from grade to grade.  He was tone-deaf, and as such, had a speech impediment which made it hard for most people to understand what he was saying.  I can imagine he was bullied in school for his odd way and peculiar speech.  At the age of 18 he had a full head of gray hair, which added to his unconventionality.  He did not date much, and as the story goes his longest relationship with a female, prior to my mother, was with a woman I later learned was a lesbian.

Due to his lack of interest in college and without any employment prospects, my father enlisted in the Marines.  He was stationed in Okinawa, Japan and to his credit was a member of the color guard.  For those unfamiliar with it, the Color Guard is responsible for rendering proper military honors in parades, ceremonies, funerals, etc. To be chosen for this was an honor and he represented the Marine Corps well.  He never saw combat and to his mother’s delight returned home no worse for the wear, in one piece, physically fit and much more disciplined.

After his discharge from the marines he went to a vocational school, where he met my mother.  He successfully completed this training and received certification.  However, he was toward the bottom of his class, and simply could not make the adjustment from the classroom to the work place.  Consequently, he went to work for the company where his father worked.  He was successful in this endeavor.  He found upward mobility achievable and the salary in the upper middle class range.  He remained in this employment until later in life when he was injured on the job and took early retirement.

My mother on the other hand was raised in a household where her parents were deeply in love, held hands daily until my grandfather died and never let anger rule the day.  Each were more concerned with the happiness of the other than their own.  They married on an Easter Sunday morning, when my grandfather was 18 and my grandmother was 19.

My grandfather was shy and reserved, but an incredibly intelligent man. He did not bear fools or foolishness well.  He worked in the oil and gas business and did well.  My grandmother was the post-mistress (as they called them back in the day) of their small Appalachian town.  I suppose now-a-days they might be called hillbillies.  But they were high school educated, honorable people who knew what loyalty and faithfulness meant.  Their integrity was above reproach.  Family was central to their lives, second only to their Methodist faith.

They tried for over 10 years to start a family.  When my grandmother finally became pregnant they were ecstatic.  Back in the early 1940’s when my mother was born, the father was not allowed in the delivery room and was not immediately allowed in the hospital room after delivery.  To catch a glimpse of my grandmother, my grandfather climbed the fire escape outside the hospital so he could look in the window.  He remained on the fire escape gazing from afar until they let him in the room to see my grandmother in person.

My grandmother had a difficult pregnancy, and it was soon decided she would have a hysterectomy, making my mother an only child.

After my mother’s birth, my grandmother became a full-time mother.  My grandmother was also the caregiver of ailing family members who lived in the family home.  Because the house was full, a couple of days a week my grandfather would ask that my mother be dressed and ready for him to take out on adventures when he came home from work. This soon became a routine my mother anticipated with great eagerness.

My mother did well in school and had a small, close-knit group of friends.  Throughout her school age years my mother battled her weight and was at times picked on because of it.  However, in high school she gained control of her weight and blossomed into a what people often referred to as a beautiful woman.

After high school, she attended junior college and received an Associate Degree.  She then attended the vocation training program my father attended.  She graduated at the top of her class.  She was very successful in her career and by the time she retired, after 35 years, she held the highest position possible in her given field.

My maternal grandparents idolized my mother and thus never made her do anything hard or uncomfortable.  She was raised as a southern debutante and as she matured she refused to relinquish that mentality.  She loved being seen by others as important, treated as extraordinarily special and praised for every infinitely small action taken.  I remember one time when I was about 7 years old we went to visit my maternal grandparents unexpectedly, on the spur of the moment.  They were so happy to see us.  I will never forget they were preparing two steaks for the grill, they had an extra potato to bake and said we would share it all and there would be plenty for everyone.  My mother became infuriated because no one offered to go to the grocery to buy a steak for her.  We got back in the car and drove 100 miles home after visiting 30 minutes.  This type of perceived slight happened often and would send her into a victim tailspin.

My maternal grandparents were incredibly generous people.  Throughout their lives, anytime they felt my mother needed something that was not being provided, they provided it.  One example would be when my grandfather retired, to celebrate his retirement, he bought my mother a dishwasher, so she would not have to hand wash dishes any longer.  They had a way of making everything in their lives revolved around my mother, even when it didn’t.

My parents were married in a large Catholic wedding in a beautiful cathedral.  The wedding party was 24 strong.  I heard it was breathtaking and one of the social events of the spring in the southern town where it was held.  They went to the beach on their honeymoon, accompanied by one of my father’s friends, which always struck me as a bizarre novelty.

After their honeymoon, they returned to their home and quickly began experiencing a flurry of fights, screaming, yelling, innuendos, hurled objects, broken dishes and doors.  My father would manipulate my mother by degrading her and emotionally abusing her.  My mother would manipulate my father by withholding sex.

Inexplicably, the oil and water partnership that is my parent’s marriage has survived, though it has never thrived.  They remain married, for better or worse. There has been suspicion of my father’s infidelity, but it was swept under the rug.  I once asked my mother if she ever considered divorce.  She responded “divorce no … murder maybe”.  To this day, I am still uncertain how to interpret the slight smirk which crossed her face when she said it.

 

 

 

When Truth Speaks

The truth is, summer has always been the most difficult time of year for me because of Mother’s Day and Father’s Day, followed later by my mother’s birthday.  The cards, the commercials, the sales, not having anyone to call, everything about it has always been like a dagger in my heart. But this year I began thinking about it and realized I am a 50 something year old and as some would say a grown ass woman.  I have always believed truth triumphs over lies and light will disperse the deepest darkness.  So, that is exactly what I am going to do and stop generations of lies, deceit and manipulation in its tracks.

The truth is, I do not have a relationship with my parents.  Most people assume my relationship with my parents is non-existent because I am lesbian.  It is true, I am a lesbian, but that is not the reason for estrangement.  In fact, my sexual orientation was never discussed.  It is not that I was afraid or ashamed to discuss it, it was that our family was so dysfunctional there was never a sane opportunity to have an honest conversation.

The truth is, I have not had a peaceable relationship with my parents since I began living with them full-time at 5 years of age and started kindergarten. Prior to that I spent most of my time “visiting” my maternal grandparents.  My parents would say this is because they both worked and my grandparents had more time to spend with me.  I was born 9 months and 7 days after my parents nuptials and they were ill-prepared for a child.  My mother was not ready to give up being the center of the universe and my father was not ready for his wife to be a mother.

The truth is, as hard as it is to admit this, I grew up in an abusive household.  There I said the word … abusive.  I have spent my entire life minimizing the abuse of my childhood.  Making excuses for both of my parents and accepting blame, as well as feeling guilt and shame for their behavior.  That stops today.

The truth is, the home in which I grew up was violent, controlling, demeaning, manipulative and as a result incredibly sad.  No one intended for it to be that way, but it is the result of one adult with a personality disorder and the other being extremely self-centric.

The truth is, my parents provided exceptionally well for me materially.  But there was little warmth, love, kindness or compassion.  My parents are not bad or horrible people, they are simply incapable of deep connections and unwilling to put in the work to change a lifetime of behaviors.

The truth is, I am uncertain if my parents love each other.  I would like to think they do … but honestly it is so dysfunctional it is hard to tell.  Behind closed doors there was a plethora of yelling, throwing things, breaking things, choking, hitting, biting, withholding of sex and many other unhealthy, vile things.  After over a half century of marriage, I think they are simply tired of the battle and are more comfortable together than apart.

The truth is, as long as I can remember, my parents told me I was their greatest disappointment.  They further told me that my friends did not love me and were using me.  I never really understood why, and I have heard they told others outside the family a very different story.  Try as I might, I never figured out what I could do to make things different.  What I could do to be better.  What I could do to be loveable.

The truth is, I have made many, many mistakes in my life.  I have not always done my best.  I have not always been honest.  I have not always acted or reacted in an honorable way.  I am a deeply flawed human.  I will own every bit of that and more, as long as it is the truth.

The truth is, regardless of my past, my mistakes or any other multitude of circumstances, I am finally content where I am.  I am happily married.  My wife is not only my best friend, she is an equal partner.   I have a church home that welcomes my wife and I and allows us to worship freely.  I have a safe and peaceful home.  I have a small group of intimate friends who support me and love me unconditionally.  My life is sweeter and more fulfilling than I ever thought possible.

The truth is, I am making peace with the past.  I am learning to accept what is … well … just is.  So, this summer and all the ones yet to come will no longer be spent grieving what never was.  I will no longer accept feelings of unworthiness for having biological parents who rejected me.

The truth is, I have so many wonderful people in my life who genuinely and deeply love me.  As such, I choose not to waste any more precious time grieving two people who chose not to love me or want me in their life.  They decided not share life with me and I am respecting their decision.

The truth is, life is full of twists, turns, up and downs.  It is full of unexplained events.  Life is entirely too short to live in the past and let others affect my perception of myself.

The truth is, detoxifying your life is hard as hell, yet infinitely freeing. Furthermore, free people are dangerous people.  Free people are not easily manipulated.  Free people are not victims.  Free people do not play the blame game.  Free people are accountable for what is theirs, and reject what is not.  Free people are able to live with an open heart.  Free people are capable of forgiveness.  Free people allow others to be true to themselves without judgement.  Free people love compassionately, live authentically, and welcome those whom are different.  Free people know who they are, who they are not and take equal responsibility for both.

The truth is, if no one has told you lately, you deserve freedom.  You are worthy of love, consideration and kindness.  Any person, regardless of relationship, who is a toxic influence in your life needs your permission to stay in your life.  Your sacred worth is one thing that need not be on the table for negotiation.  Ever.