Learner’s License

My 15-year old is learning to drive.  Even as we walked into the DMV to get his learner’s license, I couldn’t imagine sitting in the passenger seat while he piloted my vehicle; my new vehicle, my favorite-car-in-the-whole-wide-world that, even after nine months, boasts bonafide “new car smell”.  Just the thought of it made me all jumpy inside.  So, I didn’t think of it.
I supplied Shane with a Georgia Driver’s Manual a couple of months before his 15th birthday.  He rifled the pages with his thumb, barely concealing his humor at the thought that he might actually READ the book.  However, after pulling an all-nighter with his best friend who had tested several months before and therefore “knew what he was talking about”, Shane scored a 95 on the exam; a fact of which he apprised me even before flashing his paper license.
Though I hadn’t paid attention as we drove in, driving out I realized this particular branch of the DMV was situated at one end of an otherwise abandoned strip mall, meaning the only cars parked were the ones directly in front of the office.  In the kind of fit of spontaneity I’m known for, I parked the car and motioned for Shane to change places with me.  To his credit, and possibly because it’s not the first time his mother has had some kind of hare-brained notion that required his participation, he jumped out, ran around and slid underneath the wheel as though it were home.
I took the liberty of installing a few virtual stop signs along our route, just to give him practice, as we took several turns around the parking lot.  Twice, a car piloted by a “real” driver took advantage of the landlord’s misfortune, by cutting across the painted lines on its way in or out.  We both froze.  Fortunately, Shane froze on the brake.  I took this as a good sign.
We’ve been out several times since then.  He’s still a little heavy on the gas when first starting out and corners are a bit tricky, but we did manage to traverse a rather scary intersection without incident on the way to the grocery and back.  We took a drive with purpose.  I think that’s a big step.
The guilt didn’t start until Monday.  
It was a nagging thing.  It kind of pulled at me, demanding attention.  At stray times, throughout the day, Trey’s face swam into view along with an incident; a time when I felt inadequate, a situation I felt I’d mishandled.  I managed to quash them usually.  I ran the tape inside my head; the one that says “This is normal.  Everyone does this.  Don’t let it get you down.”.  If I had a dime for every time I’ve heard THAT song…
But he kept coming.  I remembered the time his father called him a “sissy”, the way he clutched at my leg through my skirt, and the feeling of desperation in knowing what a pitiful shield I made using only my hands.   There were rides to school…rides necessitated by Trey’s bad behavior at the bus stop…that seemingly provided fertilizer for arguments he saved for just this opportunity.  Eventually, I remembered he couldn’t argue if I didn’t participate.  Sometimes, then, we talked.
There were visits with counselors, arguments with his step-dad, and a notebook filled with completed homework he’d never turned in.
These reels played alternately, randomly, for two days before I recognized the catalyst.  
I didn’t teach Trey to drive.
The realization startled me at first.  How could that be?  Who could have taught him?  How does such an important phase in a child’s life go unnoticed, unaccompanied by a parent…especially when there’s only one?
That afternoon, I received an email from a friend who always seems to know “when”.  She reminded me she’d always listen, and I began writing.  About halfway through, the missing pieces fell into place until the whole messy picture became clear and a new mantra began to play inside my head.  “You were not a bad Mom.  You were not a bad Mom.  You were not a bad Mom.”
This afternoon, I received a note from Trey’s boss’s wife, Amy.  Over the years, she’d grown very fond of him.
“The guys are here today working on Bo’s in ground trampoline. While they were eating lunch, Bo walked up to Mike and so sweetly asked, “Where’s Trey?” Out of the mouths of babes… YOU are NOT forgotten, our precious friend!!”
And, I’m reminded it’s not just me.  This isn’t the first time that I’ve discovered, when I’m missing Trey more than usual, I’m not the only one.  That knowledge doesn’t make me miss him any less.  As a matter of fact, reading Amy’s note took me to a place I haven’t been in weeks.  What it does do, though, is remind me he is loved, as am I.
Today, I am thankful for blessings who give you room to grow.

© Copyright 2007-2012 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

Daddy

Daddy was a large man whose crusty work-boots tracked red mud onto mother’s carpets.

He wore glasses…big ones…with thick black frames.  And white t-shirts…
He played football in high school, but tennis courts paved his way to college.
When I was very young, he bowled.  
By the time I graduated high school he had traded balls with holes for holes-in-one.
My mother called him “Johnny”, my Aunt calls him “Brother”, and my sisters and I call him “Daddy”.  I was forty years old before I heard anyone else call him anything other than “Mister Howell”.  Years later it still sounds strange, and just a little disrespectful, to hear anyone besides my mother call him “Johnny”.
Daddy liked to eat.  As kids, he introduced us to souse meat and lox-n-bagels, but I drew the line at pickled pig’s feet.  Time spent in Korea after Hiroshima expanded his pallet.  If he was really, really good, Mom would scramble last night’s fried fish into his eggs.  
These days he prefers his fish raw, but little else has changed.  Daddy still loves to eat.  He finds a way to fit three meals in between the hours of 8 am and 4 pm every day, arriving back at his condominium-by-the-sea before most vacationers have even considered making reservations.
Daddy said things…like, “Don’t ever forget who you are!  You’re a Howell!” and “No one is better than you are!”.  The manner in which he spoke discouraged questions while imparting pride.
He also said, “Your thighs are big-around as my waist!”, and “You need to leave that boy alone.  He’s a queer!”, and “Blacks just naturally run faster than whites.  It comes from being chased through the jungle by cheetahs.”
A few years ago, he read every book Carlos Castaneda ever wrote.
Last weekend he took great delight in expounding on his latest theory on consciousness.  “Our brains are like radio receivers…”
As a kid, it wasn’t Christmas until Daddy came home.  Every Christmas Eve, sometime after 6 and before 9, he stumbled across the threshold, over-sized shopping bags in tow.  Mother’s mouth set into a sharp line, as her hands moved ever faster over the food she was preparing for tomorrow’s dinner.  
“Put these things under the tree!”, he slurred.  Professionally wrapped packages hiding expensive perfume, and too-red, too-small, lacy lingerie were tossed, haphazardly, under the tree.  Daddy was home!  We could open presents!
It’s still not Christmas until Daddy arrives…only Mom isn’t in the kitchen…and it’s the Sunday before Christmas…and my sister dresses her Dachshunds in elf costumes…and sometimes we watch football. 
Sunday is Father’s Day. 
 Just as we have for the last five Father’s Days, we’ll meet at The Varsity.  Daddy will order two all-the-way-dogs, rings, and a coke.  At least three of us will vie for the honor of paying his bill.  Odds are, my sister will do it.  We’ll find four or five unoccupied tables and we’ll push them together.  We’ll  create our space, just as several other families have done before us.  We’ll eat, we’ll talk, we’ll laugh.  I’ll take pictures despite my sisters’ protestations.  Daddy will open presents, and we’ll go home.
I’ll leave, hoping we can do it again, next year.

© Copyright 2007-2012 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

81

My Dad will be 81 today.  He made his yearly trek up from the gulf coast to Atlanta yesterday, and you can write his departure date on your calendar in ink.  He’ll leave the day after Father’s Day.  His work here will be done.  It’s a pretty sweet deal, really; a few hours driving nets him 8 days of pampering, multiple trips to his favorite restaurants, two parties in his honor, and many, many kisses.

He’s never been easy to buy for, mainly because he’s always had the means to buy for himself.  My youngest sister buys him clothes.  They’re always expensive.  They’re always sporty, and they’re always the right size.  This is because she has a hand in buying all his clothes.  Since it’s his birthday, these clothes will be wrapped in tissue paper inside a box.  If he likes them, he’ll say they’re “sharp”.  Sometimes they’re even “really sharp”.   And, if he likes them a lot, he’ll call someone’s attention to them as in, “Stacye!  Look at this!  Isn’t this sharp?”
My sister Laura gives him English Leather after shave.  She always has.  Ever since we were very young, and our parents took us to Rich’s downtown, to the floor where the ladies wearing lots of make-up and really high heels asked us how much money we had, and helped us pick out something to give Mom and Dad at Christmas.  I don’t know where she gets it now.  I can’t remember the last time I saw that familiar cedar rectangle on display inside a store.  Maybe she gets it on the internet.  You can buy anything on the internet…
My sister, Holly, and I are, depending on your particular brand of pop-psychology, the Free Spirits, the Rebels, the Scapegoats, and/or Rabble-Rousers in this family.  You never know what we might present come gift time.  Holly has gone the clothing route; a bold move, in my opinion, given her competition. For a couple of years, she gifted him with coffee.  Dad prefers Starbucks, House Blend, please…ground, not bean.
Being the artsy-fartsy one of the bunch, I crafted calendars for Dad.  Much to the chagrin of almost everyone present, I named myself “Family Photog”, and set about chronicling our events.  Only the best of the bunch graced Dad’s wall.  Best, of course, meant lots of things.  It might mean cutest, or most comical, or heartwarming, or pretty, and sometimes it just meant the only shot I got in which my sister’s eyes weren’t closed, or my nephew’s mouth wasn’t open.  I never knew how much he appreciated my efforts until I didn’t make them any more.  He called me, during a time free of family emergency, just to express his disappointment.  Of course, he had his calendar in a matter of days.
And he’ll get his calendar this year too…only it’ll be on Father’s Day, not on his birthday…just to change things up.  I’m using old black-and-whites of my mother.  I’m sure he’ll love it.  In the meantime, I went to the Farmer’s Market and bought all the things he likes.
I bought “Sundried Tomatoes Pesto”.  I’m sure the label was printed by the same woman manning the booth.  She urged me, in her gorgeous Italian accent, to try the vegetable medley.  I demurred, explaining the purchase was for my father.  “He’ll be 81 tomorrow.”  She smiled through her disappointment.
I bought a pint-sized almond pound cake from a teenager, who will never know it was the beautiful crevasse atop the loaf that sold me.
I bought smoky chipotle salsa from a woman more interested in her cellphone than selling salsa.  There was either a child or man on the other end of that phone.  I know.  I’ve been there.  I bought anyway.  Still, she was disappointed I didn’t try the empanada.
The woman selling spiced pecans was a newbie.  She hawked her wares from a cookie sheet while her son quoted prices in whispers.  I bought a small, over-priced baggie-ful.  Dad loves pecans.

The pièce de résistance appeared, where it always does; on the last row, in the last booth.  “Heavenly Pastries” is owned by Tanya Jackson who almost certainly works for someone else most of the time.  When she’s not, though, she creates perfection in the form of miniature glazed bundt cakes drizzled in chocolate.  I bought the Red Velvet.  She included a gingham gift bag with my purchase that I’ve decided to use as wrapping in place of the basket I’d pictured filling earlier. 

 

My stopping excited her.  She stood immediately.  My choosing the cake excited her even more.

 

“It’s for my father.”

 

Her smile grew.

 

“He’s going to be 81 tomorrow.  He doesn’t come to Farmer’s Markets so I’m buying all the things I think he’ll like.”. 

 

She counted my change into my out-stretched hand.

 

“Tell him I said “Happy Birthday, okay?”

© Copyright 2007-2012 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

Boy Wearing Light-up Sneakers

He was tall…quite tall.  And thin; the kind of thin that appeared to hide-behind rather than be covered-by the t-shirt that fell like a drape from his rack of shoulders.  The shirt was nearly colorless.  His pants were faded as well.  Both had seen better days, probably on the back of an older brother or a cousin who would see him wearing clothes that used to decorate the floor of his bedroom, and never make the connection.

He stood behind his father who held his brother while talking to the waiter about a table.  His eyes watched the floor, rising only occasionally to glance at his father’s face as though gauging his mood.  He knew how to stay out of the way, but he also knew that what was out of the way now might not be out of the way in just a minute.  He kept track.  And, when his father’s free hand swung in his direction while motioning towards a larger table, he took two steps to his left.
That’s when I saw them…light-up sneakers…the kind I hadn’t seen since my boys wore them twenty-odd years ago.  The shoes themselves were black and would, had the boy stood still, gone unnoticed.  His steps though, set off a pattern of multi-colored lights that chased themselves around the circumference of his school-aged foot, sending shards of longing deep into my chest.
I will never again be the mother of a boy wearing light-up sneakers.

© Copyright 2007-2012 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved