Thursday, December 22, 2016
Once Upon A Time
I have been reading a novel in which one of the teenage characters
recalls only very dimly the mother she lost in an accident when the
child was a baby. It inspired me to think back as I often do to the
memory of my father who died when I was six, and all I remember of him
then was his body lying in a coffin. But strangely enough I have a kind
of memory of a physical being when I was four and had an appendicitis
attack and he took me to the hospital, I remember being carried in his
arms, for emergency surgery, Not much of a memory but the man was in
this recollection young and vigorous. He was in fact 46. And then in a
flash I had a vivid memory of my first wife, who died when she was
twenty six; her bright youthful skin tones, the smoothness of the skin,
the flash of her eyes, the strength of her smile, everything about her
said "young," which I was beholding in my eighty six year old self, and
she was so present and yet in her youth so alien to me in my setting.
Mother, whom I next met walking down Memory Lane, was very hard for me
to recall as the woman of 61 who fell asleep on her sofa watching the
Army-McCarthy hearings and never woke up, much more vivid as the angry,
frightening presence when she confronted me with "being homosexual;" she
was a vigorous fifty two, anger making her an outstanding presence. It
was 1946. My mother in law lived into her late nineties and I saw her
often--she even came to visit for two weeks when I lived in Athens, when
she was 80. After years of a somewhat metallic relationship, not
improved by her daughter's dislike of her or at least disappointment
perhaps because her mother was not good at loving, she took to the
divorced son-in-law and I to her, parentless as I was, and I can easily
recall her looks, her strong features softening into a kind of blob of old person's
flesh, the powder she wore turning her into a kind of doll. Strange
but rather sweet. Yet the interesting thing is that in all our late in life interactions she became more and more a personality to me; I grew to like her. And my second wife? Well, I can recall her vividly
as a young woman in her twenties, nude or clothed, in or out of bed, and
then of course we were divorced, and time seemed to make her fade, but I
remember so well the two of us laughing and drinking and making love when were young.
We were so young, it was before the children arrived, that brief moment
of time, when Mary had just recently died, and Penny and I had
relatively empty lives, as though we were in an enchanted house of many
rooms to walk through. Very heaven, those years! The three boyfriends
of my younger days, the two with whom I keep up, now both in their
sixties when once they were early twenties to my forty five or so, are
grand old men, well married, fulfilled, handsome, always clothed of course but I so well remember their young bodies of yesteryear underneath, and now young and old we meet on equal
terms--a sixty five year old is not that much different from an eighty
five year old!
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