Don’t get me wrong. Part of the reason I come to visit my parents in time of confusion and doubt is because they dwarf my worries and I find that comforting, albeit probably not in the most conducive way. Their lives are Jupiter and mine is Pluto (it is not a coincidence that I mention Pluto, which was recently stripped of its planetary status by NASA). In my studio apartment in
What is bewildering is that my parents seem slightly uninterested in their children’s storefronts. I’m not sure if my neon sign isn’t plugged in, or if they already have what they are looking for, but they don’t seem to pull into my parking lot. And, actually, I wonder if I am just not in their planetary neighborhood. They’ll open up their orbit to Pluto but they’re sure as hell not going to lug Jupiter to the outskirts of the universe for a visit. Again, this relates to their inability to travel down Interstate 95 for 180 miles to come visit their two daughters in
I sound awfully cynical. It’s a coping mechanism. Bear with me.
I bumped into an old friend last week whose mother always had her figurative car parked in her daughter’s figurative 7-Eleven parking lot. As a kid I remember it being torture when I was at my friend’s 7-Eleven and her mother was there, too. Always and (what turned out to be) Forever. I recall the internal strife I felt when a parent other than my own, would want to be friends with their kids (and me). It was weird. It was annoying. It was worse than having a younger sibling want to hang out with my friends. It was desperate. It was embarrassing. When my carpool dropped me off at home, I would walk in the door to a house full of chaos. With a sports announcer magically raising his voice over the family, a brother testing out his slapshot on me as I opened the door, and a sister microwaving her ice cream I would go directly up to my room to do homework and wonder who these aliens were. Upon my ascension on the second flight of stairs, I could hear one of my parents say, “Was that
It was tough transition: being with other parents who asked lots of questions, wanted to know the gossip, wanted to know who was good and who was bad and then coming home to my parents who simply wanted to know if I was present. I craved some middle ground. Honestly, I wouldn’t have it any other way. They have plenty of other 7-Elevens and moons and planets and probably other universes, actually, to keep tabs on. What works out nicely in big families is that “keeping tabs on” doesn’t mean a thing. But thinking you know what is going on means more. As the family extrovert and hence as the Family Spokesperson, my mother projected what family goings-on were happening throughout my childhood. These projections, like today’s newscasts, were not always accurate. And to my surprise, to this day cousins, aunts, and uncles can still be astonished to learn the real version of any given story from the other six members of our household. My mother is generous, funny, straight-forward, among other qualities, but accurate she is not, at least when it comes to memory and story telling. My dad covers that area, but unless there is a need to fill in for the star news anchor or unless there is a personal appeal for a re-telling of the story, most of the audience is going to get the not-so-true story from my mom.
But I digress.
My parents lives, since I was a child, put my life in perspective. I was a worried kid. I worried about things that didn’t matter and could only pull myself out of my spirals by watching my parents try to figure out how to divide $10 between a gallon of milk, a loaf of bread, enough tuna fish for three lunches, dish soap (used alternatively until the next pay day as shampoo), and enough unleaded gas to get my dad to work and back. It was just the ways things were and we never felt emotional about those decisions. I would need to be aware of that $10 crisis in order to push away the 12 year old anxieties I had.
The problem is: at 31, I’m not sure if I can take my parents worries and replace mine. Actually, I am pretty sure that they are going to be ok in retirement. I am pretty sure that if they made it this far, then things are looking pretty peachy for them. I am pretty sure that life on Jupiter is stimulating and that navigating their planet through the solar system of family members and life choices is a piece of cake for them at this point. I am pretty sure about them.
I’m just not pretty sure about me.
1 comment:
all families are crazy. Parents and kids too. At the end of the day a parent is just a kid trying to do the best they can to raise a kid. I love what you wrote and how you wrote it. keep in touch. kerri
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