I learned to laugh at myself one summer day, circa 1983, on
my front porch. Suzy, my first friend
and next door neighbor was over and she was teaching me a song from the
Eurythmics.
“Sweet dreams are made of this, who I am to disagree? I
travel the world and the seven seas, everybody’s looking for something….”. She sang confidently out into the open,
holding an imaginary microphone. She was nine months older and one school grade
ahead of me. In other words, she was old
enough to give me advice.
So I tried, but without the microphone.
“Sweet dreams are made of this, (pause)
who I am to disagree? (pause)
I travel the world….”
Abruptly, she cuts me off.
“No, like this” she sings, louder: “Sweet dreams are made of
THIS,” (emphasis)
“Sweet dreams are made of THIS,” I repeat.
And again:
“Sweet dreams are
made of THIS,
WHO am I to DISAGREE, I travel THE world…
It went on. For some
reason she was determined that hour to help me get the tempo right. I was
shameless in front of her, no pretend pride, we’d met when we were four, after
all. She knew my deepest secrets, my
weird fears, my private matters. She had been witness to all big occasions- first
lost tooth, first bra, and the events in between. So I kept trying, despite failing, until the
entire song was reduced to one simple sentence of beats that she patiently
counted out. And then, we both laughed --at
me.
Although we had endless amounts of days like this —strawberry
milk at her house, grilled cheese at mine, Suzy and I eventually went our
separate ways, until finally, I couldn’t see her window at night. We caught up at our weddings but that was it. Our overlapping childhood was replaced with
the separations of time, maturity, and shifting allegiences; divergence to
different paths age often brings. We lost touch during the busy-ness of our
twenties and she died before we could reconnect in our later years to relive
our early memories of our days up in her apple trees. There is no one else who knows me in the way
that she did. And although we could only
see what was different back then, I now see that the differences fueled our
early connection.
Rachel entered my life during my college years, in the form
of a teaching mentor and advisor. Just graduated with a Doctorate from Harvard,
she held none of the loftiness one would expect. Instead she approached life with
a gentle but direct intellect that informed her observations. She’d notice the details, the child in the
corner who was getting overlooked or the teacher who took shortcuts. Her honesty
was heartfelt, and always meaningful, she did not shy away from constructive
advice. Her goal was to create growth--in any place or person- she found. I
looked up to her as my teacher and felt the separation that hierarchy demands
but that perspective changed one day in a public school in Western
Mass. Rachel happened to be eight months
pregnant, which in itself was tiring with her workload. But added to that she
had a horrible case of poison ivy. Covered,
swollen and itchy in a pink dotted tent dress, she actually started to cry during her
assessment of me. And in that moment I
was startled to realize that Rachel didn’t just see me as her student, she saw
me as a friend.
When I finished school, she sustained her interest in me,
writing me long letters in her careful cursive writing, month after month
through the years. She always shared details of her life, her efforts at
teaching reading to those who needed it most, shaking her head at misguided
establishment bureaucracies that prevented kids from getting needs met, her
yearly experiences with her Fresh Air Fund Child, the list continued. I
remained in awe—both by her patience and her willingness to share her time with
me during her very full life. In fact, I
was never as good at writing long letters, but would try to make up for things
by long phone calls to catch up, though it felt like cheating. I never wanted
to disappoint her. I still remember where I was standing when I got her letter
that detailed her “latest challenge”, as she described it: stage four cancer. Reading the words over and over again, I
slowly digested the sadness that she carefully left out. At her funeral, about seven
years later, the Shaker song she chose was so fitting it made me weep as it rang
true in the big church —“tis a gift to be simple, tis the gift to be free, tis
a gift to come down where we ought to be…
and when we find ourselves in the place just right, ‘twill
be in the valley of love and delight.”
And finally, Charmaine appeared with the arrival of Will, my
firstborn. She lived right next door in
our little row of townhouses. Despite being my age and childless (not by
choice), she’d pop over without knocking and burst in like the ray of sunshine
we needed but could not find-even though our shades were up. Long days alone with
a newborn are disorienting, especially when there is no particular schedule. I
had actually run out of things to say to Will by 9am. But then, there she’d be, at our most
desperate moment—chatting away about anything, nothing, about the strawberry
that I was holding, waving it in front of Will excitedly. I’d be in my pajamas
but she was from Texas, so she was in her high heels and makeup. I’d ask her where she was going, and she’d
answer “to the grocery store,” and I’d say something like “you don’t have to
dress up to go to the store here in NJ, like that” and she’d just look at me
quizzically. (To this day, whenever I
accidently end up at Kings in my slippers, I think of Charmaine). She rambled
on with Will and he smiled back at her, clearly relieved by her lightness of
being. She taught me how to make real barbecue and gave me a Junior Women’s
League Texas edition cookbook that I have cherished over the years. (Those Texan women must be pretty competitive
because I have never owned a recipe book with so many good recipes. Usually you
have to buy a whole series.) Charmaine ended up moving a year or two later, and
we gradually lost touch. With the advent of Facebook about fifteen years later,
I was able to thank her for her help during that first year of Will’s life
before she abruptly died of pancreatic cancer last spring.
So this is the gift that death leaves behind to those still
alive, a sudden and complete understanding of the essence of the person, which
remains like a permanent handprint in our lives. The other details, the details
of our differences fade away in the wake of premature endings. Instead, we are left remembering the specific
light of that one person that glowed in its very particular way. I’d like to think that I made the most of the
relationships I had with these three particular women—women that intersected my
life at critical junctures. But the
truth of the matter is, is that I didn’t.
There were reasons of course.
Busy with different paths. Busy with life. Busy with kids. Or even busy inserting
other people in the places that those people left empty when we changed towns. But
now I look back and think about how each one of them changed me so specifically,
that of course they have always been irreplaceable. Their absence is only
softened by their permanent mark on my life.
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