Mixed Blessings


2013 started out gray.  2012 ended the same way.  For most of the last week the skies have been heavy, bloated, on the verge of crying.  I know this feeling.  I spent a good portion of last year feeling this way.
I don’t like to hear someone say “This day can’t be over soon enough!” or “I wish it was Friday already!”.  Ask my son how many times he’s heard me say “Don’t wish your life away!”.
And yet, as I sit at my desk watching the first few drops of rain ping one leaf at a time on their way down, I am aware of a sense of relief that a new year has begun, that the old one is finished, and that we’ve careened past yet another milestone no more damaged than we were going in.  And, I am grateful.
Thanksgiving was different; not bad, not difficult, just different.  Christmas was different, too…a little sadder, and angry, but not in a fierce way.  Angry in a wistful way.  Wistful as in “Isn’t it a shame he chose not to be here?”  Because, he did.  Trey chose not to have Christmas with us.  And we know how to do Christmas!  We have great Christmases! I don’t understand why he wouldn’t want to be here…
There are lots of things I don’t understand.  
I don’t understand why a general practitioner happily rewrites a middle-aged woman’s Zoloft prescription for months on end, but when that same woman suggests her adolescent son might also benefit from anti-depressants, he refuses without listening and looks at her as though she should be ashamed.
I don’t understand a therapist who, after several unsuccessful attempts at getting an obviously troubled teenager to open up, dismisses his mother with “You’re wasting your money and my time.  Don’t bring him back until he’s willing to talk.”, or a high school counselor who, upon being alerted by a classmate that a student is cutting himself, shakes her head at the parent saying “We simply can’t have that here.”, as though mental illness is somehow catching and another kid will see his scars and think them cool and before you know it everyone is cutting.
Anyone who tells you mental illness carries no stigma never tried to get help for a disturbed child.
I do understand, though, the horror inherent in the realization that the weapon-wielding monster might have been my son and the ever-present fear that the next time he might not be pulled over before crossing the center line.
My son is dead but he didn’t take anyone with him.  I understand that.  And, I am grateful.
I am told that the black hole in my memory where last January and most of February used to be is normal.  I likened the space to a blank chalkboard when describing it to my therapist who agreed that the missing chunk of time may, indeed, contribute to my feeling that every moment since is a do-over.
In one of those moments, several weeks after I began seeing her, I realized parts of me I hadn’t missed are back.  My wounds are healing, as all wounds do, by reclamation.  The “skin” has grown back, not as new skin but as a continuation of the old, only better, stronger, scarred and thus resilient.  I like her, the woman I am becoming; the one I was before but newer, stronger, with a chance to be better.
That is his gift.
He always did that.  He always brought me gifts.  From the time he was very small, if he went outside, he came back in with pockets full of rocks and handfuls of dandelion heads.  He was sure every rock was a gem.  And they were.  I kept them all.  
At Thanksgiving last year he brought me bird’s nests to add to my collection.  He frequently came across them in his work and saved them for me.  Some were square, as though formed inside a box.  Some were round and tiny.  And one had parts of blue eggshell inside.
And he wrote me notes like the one I found a few weeks ago while cleaning out a file cabinet.
Thank you so much from all of us.  Without you I/we would be nothing.  In my whole 21 years you have never let me down.  You are absolutely without question the best mom in the world. I love all you guys with all my heart.
Thank you.
Love, Trey
 

 

© Copyright 2007-2013 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved

Oh, My Darlin’…


“You wait!” A familiar sneer leant my mother’s words an equally familiar tone of acridity. “You wait! You’ll wish you had this time back! Time moves faster the older you get. Why, at my age, a year goes by in a blink of an eye.”

As a kid, who had probably just bemoaned a yawning three week wait until Christmas, her admonition had no more effect than her frequent wishes for my future.

“I hope you have children, and I hope they cause you just as much trouble as you’ve caused me.”

As it turned out, she was right, on both counts.

I have heard the month of January described as meaningless after the hustle and bustle of a holiday season that now seems to span several months. There is, of course, an introspective aspect to January, coming as it does, after weeks of economic, gastronomic, and even alcoholic depravity.

New Year’s Day dawns on millions of hung-over, antacid-swilling Americans, who greet the day holding a television remote control. Football-filled hours pass in a semi-upright position, interrupted only by the odors of foods said to be infused with magic powers on this day, and this day only. More often than not, it is while we are pushing collard greens around the perimeter of our plate, that someone floats the topic of New Year’s resolutions. As we anticipate finally being able to access a beer without encountering a well-maintained eyebrow raised by the “time police”, we attempt to discern a recognizable image in the smattering of cornbread crumbs stuck in gravy remnants before answering.

And, no matter the answer, we finally manage to pull from the refuse that is our dinner plate, one thing is sure; by January thirty-first we will have forgotten it. This is the stuff of January.

Recently, though, I’ve discovered other reasons to mark January.

January is the month of the Clementine. In case you are not familiar with this delectable nugget of sugary citrus, a Clementine is cousin to the tangerine. A friend tried, for years, to sell me on their merits, but to my discerning eye they appeared nothing more than a miniature tangerine at twice the price. I couldn’t imagine anything about them being worth double the money…until my son tasted them.

Usually imported from Spain and neighboring regions, these tiny, orange morsels are sold almost exclusively in crates. This feature originally, prohibited me from buying them. This year, after tasting one provided by my friend, I decided to chance unloading a crate of citrus on a family usually partial to meatier fruits such as apples, pears, and melons. Within days, my son was urging me to return to the store for another crate, and when I tasted one, I understood why.

That was three crates ago, and on Saturday, I carefully placed one of the last three available into my grocery cart. Clementine season is winding down. We’re treating this crate as though it will be our last, because it just might be.

This weekend, I discovered another reason to mark the passing of January. My Christmas cacti, inaccurately named as they begin blooming just after Thanksgiving, are waning. I have, over the years, collected a virtual grove of cacti by taking advantage of post-holiday plant sales. At present I nurture eight, in varying shades. This year, for the first time, all of them bloomed.

My grandmother raised Christmas cacti, and I loved one of them, especially. It was at least two feet in diameter, and bloomed in a lovely, deep, shade of pink. Visits to her house were warm, due in part to her attention to the thermostat, but also because of our shared interests. She knew I loved plants, and she loved to share. Every time I visited, she pinched off shoots of any plant I admired, urging me to root them. And, I did.

Today, my largest Christmas cactus, started as an offshoot of the one I so admired, measures over two feet in diameter. She is old. There are unattractive striations upon her leaves, and yet she blooms, gloriously, year after year. When others tease, putting out buds that never come to full fruition before the foliage shrivels; she blooms, and blooms, and blooms. I fertilize her, in warmer months. I water her, judiciously at first, until the buds begin to squeeze from her succulent fronds, whereupon I strengthen her by plying her with liquid. And she responds to my ministrations, year after year, after year.

Withered blooms fell into my watering can yesterday. The show is nearly over. As I looked around the sunroom, I enjoyed, possibly for the last time, each and every bloom; bright pink, salmon red, and white, with just a trace of pink lining each petal.

And I marked January, wondering where the time had gone.

© Copyright 2007-2009 Stacye Carroll All Rights Reserved