The house sold. I guess you knew that. I supposed you’re watching, from wherever you are.
Where are you?
The kids are doing well. My two oldest are in college. Joseph has an internship at Sunoco. When he calls he says things like pipeline and acquisition. His voice delights me, even if I’m not always sure what he’s talking about.
My middle son, Charlie, is a pitcher. Every week, he stands on the mound and battles. Every week, I hold my breath.
Rose is sixteen. Remember her? She is fair like our side of the family – blonde hair with blue eyes that search your face for answers I never seem to have.
And my youngest son, Henry – you met him a handful of times – he’s a freshman in high school. Tall, skinny, sweet, and silly. He would have made you laugh.
Jack is thriving. He has a job. He’s taking college classes. Never once, since the day he was diagnosed with autism, did I imagine this could happen.
I don’t know why I’m telling you this stuff now. I never told you when you were alive. I couldn’t seem to break through the glass curtain that ruled every conversation.
The same glass shields me from Jack. And while your diagnosis is different, the presentation is the same. Anxiety, paranoia, a tendency to conspiracy theories mixed with a smidge of righteousness. For him, we introduce all the things your generation rejected: counseling, medication, open conversation. I refuse to let his spirit be ravaged. I refuse to lose him to it.
The last time I saw you, you asked me what I thought God looked like. I knew you were transitioning then – beginning the process of moving from this world to another. I perched, awkward and uncertain on edge of your hospital bed. I thought about holding your hand, but we were never those kind of people.
Where are you now? Every once in a while, I wonder.
Grief is loud until it is quiet.
Estrangement is never the first choice. This is the part people don’t seem to understand.
It is not a teenage huff, all slammed doors and rolled eyes. It’s not because we disagreed about politics or religion.
There was no line we drew in the sand. There was a falling out that led to space, and our gap never quite bridged again.
It was not what I wanted. But the toxicity bloomed between us, the way a spill on the rug turns to a crimson stain.
Estrangement is many things. It is wandering by the card aisle on Mother’s Day but leaving the store empty-handed. It’s standing on the periphery of your friends and their mothers, wondering if there is something inherently lacking in you.
It is watching trays of sandwiches arrive when your mother-in-law succumbs to cancer, and deep silence when your own mother passes away. There is a tightening in your throat – not jealousy, or even bitterness. Something more akin to sadness. For months, the sight of ham and cheese on a roll can level you.
It’s a heightened alert for your own children, worrying if the legacy of brain wiring may land within one of them.
Where are you now?
I hope you are surrounded by your favorite things.
Rhododendrons in full bloom.
A full bottle of your favorite perfume.
Books and novels and movies.
I hope you are finally free.
Happy Mother’s Day.
A perfect remembrance of your “estranged” Mama for this day…
I can hear your souls soft cry for what could have been…
Happy Mother’s Day, Carrie.
Your words always flatten me. I truly believe my daughter and I are not nearly to that point. I sent you our Mothers Day. We were fine. Unsure who influences her otherwise. A few people on my mind. I’ve stopped all lecturing. Anything I say is normal and positive. And I assure you, I have pictures made when possible. I “think” there were some mental issues your mother might have had that weren’t discussed back then but I can’t say what I don’t know about. I just know you have helped me immensely for taking on this topic along with autism, lots of kiddos and marriage. Your writing is beyond perfect. I hope we can meet again one day. I’m proud of having a picture made with you. I’d love one with you, me, my daughter and granddaughter. Come to NC and give a speech. I can make the pictures happen. I know your Mother’s Day was grand and I am glad. ❤️😘