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Poverty

Nothing in my childhood presaged the fact that I would spend almost ten years in poverty.  I was raised in a middle class home, and both my parents worked.  I attended a private college preparatory high school where my mother was an English teacher. Going to college was never a question.  I graduated with a BA in Early Childhood Education. I was privileged in many ways that I didn’t understand until much later in my life. The details of how I ended up in a family of five living on less than $20,000 a year are complicated and tedious.  Suffice it to say that some things were within my control and some things were out of my control. I was too young when I got married–too stubborn in some ways and too malleable in others.  I knew nothing about my husband’s alcoholism and my inability to control it.  I willingly entered into a difficult situation, and then I got stuck. 

So I found myself at twenty-eight years old, pregnant for the second time, with a three-year-old daughter and nine-year-old step-daughter. My husband had just applied for public assistance, which meant I could not work much.  The income qualifications were outrageous–I could have worked full time at a retail job and earned too much to qualify for assistance and not enough to pay all our bills.  I cared for a friend’s child several days a week for a little cash.  We received $600 a month for rent and bills and around $200 a month in food stamps.  I remember one cold November day, standing in my darkly lit bedroom staring at myself in the blurry mirror on top of my dresser and wondering, “How is this my life?”  

These were some of the darkest years of my life.  We had barely enough to eat, and our diet revolved around what was affordable–foods like pasta, cheap spaghetti sauce, and the milk, cheese, and peanut butter our WIC checks provided for us.  The local food pantry delivered a box of food for Thanksgiving.  And once I went to our local grocery store to ask for a free bag of food.  We were down to ketchup and mustard at home, and our next food stamp allotment was a week away.  I still feel a pain in my chest when I think about standing at the customer service desk waiting for the clerk to bring me my bag–the employees were people I knew well from my years of shopping there.  What did they think of me?  No customers or employees ever commented on my food stamps or WIC checks, but I felt shame using them nonetheless.  “This is not how I was raised,” I thought every time I bought groceries.  

The shame was not limited to my shopping trips.  I also felt ashamed of my house.  We lived in a small cottage next door to my husband’s parents.  I think it was around 800 square feet total.  The kitchen/dining room had a concrete slab floor which was cold in the winter and slippery with condensation in the summer.  When my daughter was born, it was the main room of our house.  She learned to sit up, to crawl, and to walk on the rugs we put over the concrete, but the rugs couldn’t prevent the horrible “thump” that her head made when she tipped over or slipped.  I hesitated to bring my few mommy-friends over because I didn’t want their babies to tip over and thump their heads.  

For many years, there were only three walls in the bedroom my husband and I used. The fourth wall was simply a curtain pulled between the bedroom and the adjoining space– hardly big enough to be called a separate room.  Our bedroom sat over the earthen basement, accessed through a bulkhead outside the house.  The damp, mildewy smell of the basement seeped into all our clothes, our books, our bedding.  The property was surrounded by a state forest, which was lovely and natural, but also dark.  We had snow on our lawn until April, and then black flies so bad that my children refused to play outside.   

I rarely invited people to our home.  I was embarrassed– we had so little space, and the space we had seemed so paltry.  I remember when my son was four or five and he was invited to a friend’s house for a play date.  The friend’s house was a three-story Victorian farmhouse– newly built–with a bonus room over the garage that was dedicated to the kids’ toys.  There were shiny wood floors, beautiful Palladian windows, brand new furniture and appliances.  I left him there to play and then cried the entire drive home.  I would never reciprocate that invitation.    

On top of my shame, I felt a crushing sense of loss.  I could not provide for my children the comforts I had enjoyed myself as a child.  No pool membership, no piano lessons, no vacations to visit the grandparents.  The book Opening Our Hearts; Transforming Our Losses, from the Al-Anon Family Groups, describes the many types of loss associated with alcoholism. One of these losses is the loss of dreams for what your life might have been like.  Loss of dreams for your children. My childhood/childish dreams of raising a family in a big house with a wide lawn had turned into a nightmare of the realities of alcoholism and poverty.  I can never get those years back, to provide my children the life I had wished for them.  They are adults now, and they turned out fine, for the most part!  But I still grieve from time to time for what I didn’t give them.

My loss was amplified by the fact that we lived in a largely affluent part of the country where the economy is based in tourism.  Of course, poverty is difficult to experience in any location.  In my case, the stark contrast between my family’s isolated poverty in the midst of great affluence revealed to me the veil that I had been living behind, and that the people around me still were.  Growing up in a middle class home, going to a private high school and then on to college– what did I know of poverty other than driving through a neighborhood on my way to somewhere else?  

Poverty ripped through that veil and now, like Hester Prynne seeing the scarlet letter where others could not see it, I began to see the veil in front of everyone’s eyes. 

On the road where we lived in poverty there were only a handful of other homes, and several of them were owned by people who lived elsewhere and came to our area on weekends and vacations.  I would walk with my children in their hand-me-down stroller past beautiful, empty, multi-bedroom homes while my growing family squeezed into 800 square feet.  The wealthy tourists who arrived on weekends to occupy those homes and patronize our town’s stores and restaurants lived behind their own veil.  Learning that my husband was a fiddle player, one older man said “Have you been to Ireland?”  When we answered “No,” he seemed disgusted.  “You HAVE to go to Ireland! I just don’t understand people who don’t like to travel,” as if everyone can afford to travel, but some of us just choose not to.

Making friends was difficult once I saw the veil.  “Are you signing your daughter up for the children’s chorus?” one potential friend asked.  She added “You really should– it’s only $700 a year!” How do I explain that $700 is more than one month’s allotment of public relief?  How do I explain that $700 is not “only” $700 to us?  I didn’t explain.  I just isolated myself. 

Even people who should have known better lived behind the veil.  A social worker I visited through the public health clinic listened to my tales of poverty and shame and said to me “You can live on less.  Maybe you just don’t buy that new winter coat this year.”  Did she really think it was that simple? I had been shopping at thrift stores and hadn’t had a new winter coat in 10 years. I was still wearing the L.L. Bean parka my parents bought for me before I moved east. 

These years in poverty put a rip in my veil that would only widen, and as difficult as this tearing was, it was one of the greatest gifts of my struggles with poverty.  This experience was my awakening to the fact that there are multiple realities around us behind the veil of our own limited perceptions.  I now began to see that the things I had taken for granted, the things that many people take for granted, are not givens in life.  Money provides options.  People without money have fewer options.  It was a vivid example of the danger of making assumptions.  

Years later, when I was a newly certified English teacher, I took a course on African-American history and literature, and I read for the first time The Souls of Black Folk, by W.E.B. Du Bois.  Just three paragraphs into chapter 1, I was thunderstruck.  

After the Egyptian and Indian, the Greek and Roman, the Teuton and Mongolian, the Negro is a sort of seventh son, born with a veil, and gifted with second-sight in this American world,– a world which yields him no true self-consciousness, but only lets him see himself through the revelation of the other world.  It is a peculiar sensation, this double-consciousness, this sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity.  One ever feels his two-ness,– an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, to unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn assunder.  

And here was my gift–the realization that others knew of the veil that I had felt tearing apart in my own life.  That others felt gifted (and perhaps cursed) with “second-sight” to see the world from two vantage points.  I cannot compare my eight-year-long experience of living in poverty with a lifetime of living in the United States as a Black man, but I felt a connection to Du Bois, and I realized that this was one of the many realities going on around me.  It was a gift that rewarded me and humbled me simultaneously.  Others understood!  And yet, I had so much to learn.  In my years of poverty, I began unwrapping the gift of seeing beyond the veil. 

Further Reading: 

The Souls of Black Folk, by W.E.B. Du Bois, has inspired me as a history teacher and as a writer.  Du Bois was a genius, without a doubt.  His writing is incisive, multi-faceted, and eloquent.  

Opening Our Hearts, Transforming Our Losses, Al-Anon Family Groups.  This book helped me to see that loss takes many forms and that alcoholic families experience both subtle and obvious losses.  Seeing my experiences mirrored in this book and reading about the experiences, strength, and hope of others has brought me serenity in many difficult moments.   

The Good Guys

I was a very anxious child.  Convinced that our house would catch fire (in the days before smoke alarms were mandatory), I kept the bottom half of the cardboard box that our new refrigerator had been shipped in, and I put my favorite toys in it so that I could drag them to safety in a moment’s notice.  Aside from fires, I worried about ghosts and monsters, car accidents, tornadoes, burglars–you name it, I feared it. 

My independent and intellectual parents did not know what to do with me.  My siblings teased me, and my mother would try, with exasperation, to convince me that there was nothing to fear.  One night, when I came to her with some now-long-forgotten fear, she told me something that her father used to tell her:  “Nothing bad will happen to us.  We’re the good guys.”

I have thought of that statement many times in my adult life.  Did she mean that our family followed the rules?  Was on the right side of justice?  Or that God or some higher power was on our side?  It wasn’t true, of course.  Bad things did happen to me, and to my siblings.  For me, it was not just one or two difficult life events–it was a nearly thirty year stretch of what I jokingly called “learning experiences.”  I married when I was young and naive.  My 20-year marriage was crippled by poverty, alcoholism, and instability. My husband and I separated, and then he died suddenly and tragically in a car accident.  A year later my mother also died suddenly.  Another family member struggled with alcoholism and spent a month in rehab.  One of my children stopped talking to me for several months.  And then, when my life started to balance again, I was diagnosed with breast cancer. It has been a year since my surgery and radiation and my last mammogram was clear.  Thank you, modern medicine. 

I have just returned from the memorial for my Uncle Mike, my mom’s brother and the last of her surviving siblings.  I spoke to Mike occasionally and have many fond memories of him from my childhood.  At his memorial I was struck by how privileged he and my mother had been. They had attended private boarding schools and elite colleges like Vassar and Princeton.  No wonder my grandfather told my mother that nothing bad would happen to them– they were not the “good guys,” they were just privileged enough to shield themselves from bad things happening.  My uncle became a lawyer in New York City and traveled internationally. A friend of his spoke at the memorial and described Mike as an “ardent capitalist” whose views were softened in his sixties or seventies when he delivered Meals on Wheels to senior citizens in Ithaca and realized that many people his age were impoverished, ailing, and homebound.   

I am so glad that my uncle had this experience and came to know that there are many realities going on “out there” in the world around us, that his life was not the norm.  After the memorial, as I drove through Ithaca and the campus of Cornell University, I wondered at the way we strive so much to provide our children with that sheltered life.  Of course, we don’t want our children to suffer.  At the same time, I see what a gift it was for me to understand, in my twenties, living in poverty in an unstable and alcoholic marriage, that there were other “realities” than the one I had been raised in.  That there were forces beyond an individual’s control that could shape her life.  That not everyone was middle-class and well-educated and that not everyone desired to be!  This, to me, is the greatest “gift” of struggle, of loss, of grief.  Our wounds provide an opening to let humility and empathy in, if we let them in.  To see that we are not our circumstances– for good or bad. To respond with gratitude for the smallest of joys.  To know that bad things happen to all people– there are no “good guys” who are protected from harm, and those who have struggles do not have them because they are “bad guys.”  We are all just human, improvising the best life story we can with plot twists that are often out of our control.  We are all doing the best we can. 

Further Reading:

One of the books that helped me the most along my journey was When Bad Things Happen to Good People, by Harold Kushner.  Notice the title is not WHY bad things happen, but WHEN.  Bad things will happen, even to “good” people. I am not religious in the traditional sense of the word, but I found this book to be very comforting and wise.

Lessons from Loss #3

The future is not going to be what you thought it would be. Don’t try to predict it. You can’t imagine what it will look like. Fear is not prophecy, and your wishes and daydreams are far less interesting than reality will be. Leave room for surprises– there will be many surprises!!

Lessons from Loss #1

There’s a great line from the early 2000’s TV show “Six Feet Under” :
“I know that if you think life’s a vending machine where you put in virtue and take out happiness then you’re going to be disappointed.”

Life is also not a vending machine where you put in suffering and are rewarded with something you want. Life’s just not fair, a lot of the time. But it’s still wonderful.

The Way You Thought It Would Be

One piece of advice I read right after my husband died was something along the lines of “Get used to the idea that your life is not going to be the way you thought it would be.”  As the years go by, I am realizing more and more how difficult that advice is to carry out.  I think I’ve got it– I think I’ve accepted it–and then I find myself adjusting again, letting go of more, and thankfully, opening up to what “not the way I thought it would be” might look like.

When Anson died, I foolishly thought the next chapter of my life might be better than the previous chapter.  Anson had struggled with stress, anxiety, and alcohol dependency, and we had struggled financially for 10 out of the 21 years we were married.  I envisioned myself meeting a man who was financially and emotionally stable, who would make a good role model for my children and create a new, adventurous life with me filled with travel and cool adult children and grandchildren.  We would get married and create a big, beautiful Brady Bunch family and take a picture every summer at our beach house on the Cape with all of us wearing blue.  I wanted a new family that I could insert myself and my kids into so we could just keep cruising forward through life.  After dating for a few years and having some six-month or longer relationships with a couple of men, I realized that this dream was not likely to happen.  I don’t move in the same circles as men who own beach houses on the Cape.  The men I do feel comfortable with come with their own challenges and problems.  I had to accept the fact that my new chapter will be better in some ways, but there will always be trade-offs.  As my sister once said, “it won’t be better, just different.”

It’s been six years now that I’ve been processing grief and dating.  There have been years of feeling lonely, hurt, and sad, and longing for a positive, healthy, nurturing relationship to balance out the loss and pain.  I’ve tried five or six online dating sites, and wow, there are some “interesting” people out there.  I see my friends and relatives navigating their own relationship terrain and I realize how hard the struggles can be.  “Not better, just different” has slowly morphed into “actually, it could be a lot worse.”  There are men out there who have harder problems than Anson had.  And there is no doubt that  being single is far healthier than being in a bad relationship.  My daughter works so much that it is very hard to see her, and my son has told me flat out that he doesn’t want to meet the men I date unless I’m sure it’s really serious.  Maybe I won’t find a man who will  create a new family with me– maybe I’ll find a man who never had kids of his own or who doesn’t earn as much money as I do and can’t afford to travel with me.  Maybe I’ll travel by myself or with my sister.  Maybe my future partners will be polite to my children, but that’s all.  It’s not going to be the way I thought it would be.

Now my son has moved out, and it’s just me and the cat living in this four bedroom home.  I so badly want to sell this house and get out of the burden of lawn mowing and shoveling.  Every day, I am more tempted to just rent for a year to see what my next move will be.  I have been on one coffee date in the past six months.  But I have an amazing group of friends through my dance community.  They are all younger than I am.  Most of them are immigrants.  They talk about traveling and living in other places– two years here, three years there.  Maybe I’ll do that– rent an apartment, take a year off from teaching to go abroad and teach English, be a nomad for a while.  Maybe I’ll have lovers and friends  who are 15 years younger than me and my kids won’t even know about it.  Maybe I’ll be a cool middle aged woman who’s traveled the world and been on all kinds of adventures. Maybe, if my son and daughter ever decide to have kids, I’ll be that quirky grandma who visits for a few weeks in the summer before heading off to another country to explore.  Maybe someday I’ll settle back down with a head full of interesting stories to tell.

Who knows?  It’s not going to be the way I thought it would be.

 

Sick and tired

A year ago, I had lunch with some female friends, one of whom is also a widow.  I had been telling them about the man I had recently dated and how I wasn’t sure I was even ready to date yet, even though it has been several years since my husband died. She asked me how long it had been, and I said “Five years.”

“Oh….” she responded.  “It’s still fresh.”

Her comment both surprised me and made me annoyed.  Five years is “fresh?”  Why?  It seems like an eternity.  I want to move on, I want to get out of grief and into joy.  I’ve been slogging through this walking flu for five years– living holiday after holiday without him, watching birthdays and anniversaries tick by, attending weddings, becoming a grandmother, creating a life for myself alone for five years– how can it still be “fresh?”  I don’t WANT it to be fresh anymore!  I want to be done!

And yet, the grief just keeps coming.  In the past five years, my marriage fell apart, my husband moved out of our house and then died, my daughter moved out on her own, my mother died, and my son J went off to college.  The nest has been slowly, gradually, painfully emptying, although J was still coming home for summers and vacations.  Two weeks ago, my son– who has always been a kind, thoughtful, communicative young man– picked a huge fight with me over text and moved in with his girlfriend.   We have not spoken face to face since.

Now, I know that it is developmentally appropriate for him to move out.  He’ll be 24 years old in two days.  I understand his desire to be independent and to live with the first serious love of his life.  I support his need to do this.  What I don’t understand is why he had to pick a huge fight with me and call me names.  We have never talked that way to each other; we’ve always worked out our differences with kindness toward each other.  Everyone I speak to says “He’ll figure it out.  He’ll come back.”  I have faith that he will– he has always come around eventually and talked to me about what was bothering him.  I trust that he will again.  But I can’t pretend it doesn’t hurt in the meantime.

I’m writing today not because I’m hurting so much about my son that I need to vent.  I’m writing today because I’m having trouble getting myself motivated to leave the house.  It’s rainy and cold and I’m not looking forward to being around people.  I feel like I’m back to the grief I felt after Anson died all over again.  Like six years later, I’m still grieving just as hard.  I feel like a failure as a parent and as a spouse, and maybe just as a human being in general.  I don’t want to hear people talking about their families visiting and their vacations.  I don’t want to see parents walking through town with their adult children.  I don’t want anyone to ask me “How are your kids?”  I know this will pass.  I know it’s a temporary condition.  But I’m so sick of it.  I’m sick of feeling bad.  I’m sick of talking about feeling bad.  I’m sick and tired of being sick and tired.  I can’t pretend like I’m not hurting and I’m tired of talking about hurting.

I know I need to get back to my gratitude journal, and I will.  But maybe I need to feel ungrateful for a while.  Maybe I just need to sit with the injustice and the unfairness of life, and just be stinky by myself.  Like when you’re really sick and you don’t shower for a couple of days.  Because, man….when you start to feel better, doesn’t that first shower feel great?  I’ll get there.

 

Yes, and….

My son J moved out of our house this week.  His decision was sudden but not completely unexpected.  He’s twenty-three, after all, and has a steady girlfriend.  I’m at a good place in my grief process to deal with this– I’m sad, but I’m going to be okay.  It’s hard when I think about my household shrinking from five people to one over five years as my kids moved out and my husband died.  Most moms who talk about the empty nest syndrome still have their husbands around.  This normal and difficult “launch process” is even more painful for a widow.

Before my son moved out, I had the idea that I might sell the house and downsize to a condo, and J was both stressed out by that idea and grateful.  He felt like he needed to get rid of stuff he wasn’t using any more, like when he was a child and we would “update” his toys to get rid of the transformers and LEGOs he wasn’t using.  Now it was tools and a home brewing kit and other big “toys” that he had bought and tried out and then outgrown.  We had cleaned and tossed, made multiple trips to the dump, and J had a yard sale.

Today, I cleaned out a closet as I prepare for workers to put a new floor in my living room.  I found a few more items I could sell or get rid of– two wind chimes, two kites, a basketball and a tennis racket.  As I cleaned them up and got them ready for selling, I remembered that one of the kites had been a wedding present from my sister.  I tried to think of how many times we had used the kite over the 21 years my husband and I were married.  Maybe three?  Thinking about the kite brought up memories of the other gifts we had received and rarely used, like the picnic basket that still sits in our garage.  I remember getting those gifts as a young bride with a new husband and a step-daughter.  I envisioned wind-swept hill-top picnics and days spent in the park flying kites.  The same for the basketball and the tennis racket– they came with a cluster of expectations about what my kids and my family would be like.

When I talk to other widows about their grief, we find that we have a common feeling– the idea that marriage and family is in large part an illusion.  Widows talk about death lifting a “veil” that covers the eyes of those who are still happily married or happily single.  What we think of, before grief, as permanent, solid, and reliable is shaken and ripped apart in grief.  Nothing is permanent.  Relationships are temporary.  The world is not solid, but precarious and liable to go out from under you without warning.  Losing an alcoholic spouse in a car accident most certainly adds to that sense of precariousness. Drunk driving takes lives without warning; in the blink of an eye, a happy family enters a vortex of grief, trauma, confusion and pain.  Nothing seems stable.

Discovering the kites today reminded me of this illusion. I had the sudden feeling that these were props in a play that I had been trying to stage for the past 30 years.  The scene was “family life” and there would be games of “horse” in the driveway, swimming pools and beach vacations, game nights and laughter, sledding in the wintertime, school band concerts, and cozy Christmas mornings.  I feel like some families pull off this scene well– maybe they have stronger directors than my family had.  It seems like, in some families, all the actors know their lines and play their roles with committment.  In an alcoholic family, at least one of the actors shows up on opening night drunk or stoned, or both.  Lines are forgotten, and the play veers off into a totally new production while the other actors struggle to improvise, or walk off the stage completely.

And this is why life– especially life with an alcoholic– is not like a play.  Or if “all the world’s a stage,” and we are merely players, it is a play without rehearsal.  In many ways, it is all improvised.  We can bring props to the stage, but they might not be used.  And so, I decided,  I can let these props go.  I can let my son go.  Five years ago, that idea would have brought me to tears as I mourned what I had wanted for my family and didn’t achieve.  That scene didn’t come off the way I had hoped.  I’m still sad about that, but today I feel like I have another scene coming up.  I don’t know what the scene will look like– a soliloquy?  a dialogue?  To a large extent, it’s going to be improv.  But isn’t the rule of thumb in improv to say “Yes, and…”?  That would be a good mantra for the next phase of life.

And yet, we persevere

I’m sitting here typing this with a feeling in my lower abdomen that I can only describe as being punched in the cervix.  For those of you without a cervix, imagine having a splitting headache in the deepest, most inaccessible part of your body.   I just returned from the gynecologist– I have had some abnormal cervical cells on my pap smears for the past few years, and they’re not going away.  They’re not getting worse and I do not have HPV, so that’s the good news.  But my doctor advised that I have them looked at every six months just to be on the safe side.

Today the gynocologist and I discussed my IUD and whether to leave it in for two more years or take it out now.  I told him I preferred to leave it in– I’m only 52, I still have occassional spotting, so I think I’m still ovulating from time to time.  He agreed, and he proceeded to do the biopsy which suddenly felt like a balloon had exploded inside my body.  Then he calmly said, “Your IUD came out.  It was attached to the biopsy piece.”

Here’s what I get to take home: 1. Cramps like I haven’t had since I was a teenage girl getting her period.  2. Two requests for blood work– one three weeks  from now after my hormones regulate and one for three weeks after that to see what my follicle stimluating hormones are doing.  Based on those results, my gynocologist will tell me if I still need and IUD.  3. The gyno’s suggestion that I use a condom if I have sex between now and the last blood work results.  (Thanks for the reminder that I haven’t had sex in six months and have no good prospects in sight.) 4. A nagging question– When will there be a MALE birth control pill or device?? and 5. An overwhelming sense of shock and awe that any women my age have a positive attitude toward life.

Being an aging woman is hard enough.  Being a middle-aged woman who is going through a divorce and then grief is indescribably difficult.  I remember one day when my husband had just moved out of our house and I was cleaning up the piles of stuff he had left behind.  I was feeling sad and angry and scared about the future and wondering if anyone would ever find me attractive again.  I picked up a beautiful wooden hand mirror that I had received as a gift in my twenties, and in my reflection I saw my neck skin, loose and crepey and old looking.  I literally fell to my knees and cried in a heap on the floor.  Why now?  Why did I have to be “resingled” when the ravages of old age were just around the corner?

After that, it seemed like one slap in the face after another.  My ex got a girlfriend right away and was flying to Baltimore every other weekend at her expense.  Then his lawyer decided he should ask for alimony from me since his hearing loss might prevent him from working in the future.   The first man I slept with was less than forthcoming about his sexual history, and when I learned the truth, I rushed to a walk-in clinic to be tested for everything, crying as I sat in the exam room.  The nurse who did the tests said quietly “Maybe you’re not ready to be dating yet?”  She was right.  Five months after my husband died, when I did feel ready for dating, I ended up with a genital wart (which, by the way, condoms do not prevent) and an abnormal pap smear.

I got the IUD when I met a decent guy who was patient with me as I tried various methods of birth control and finally opted for the Mirena.  I feel like the hormones in the IUD screwed up my emotions for the first six months I had it in, although my doctor assures me that it is too small a dose of hormones to do that.  My emotions have been rocky for six years– is it because my marriage ended? Is it grief due to the tragic death of my soon-to-be-ex-husband? Grief over my mom’s death a year later?  The empty nest syndrome?  Peri-menopause?  Birth control?  Who the hell knows?  Now I am going cold-turkey on the hormones my body had become accustomed to– what hormonal joys do I have to look forward to next?

All I know is this– aging is not for sissies.  Older women are portrayed in our culture as weak, out of touch, clingy, and useless.  (They are not.  If they persevere and keep their heads up, they are the strongest creatures on earth.)  Men write articles about why they date younger women, saying “Older women are so negative.”  Really?  I wonder why?  It’s not as if biology and society hit women with a double whammy at mid-life.  Women are the ones who deal with birth control, pregnancy, breast feeding, and the bulk of child rearing.  Then at mid-life, after we’ve given our best reproductive years, many of us are left by the fathers of our children so that they can puruse younger women.  And yet we persevere.  We keep caring for our children and grandchildren, we keep learning new things and exploring the world.  We keep showing up.

So if you see me, or any woman my age, and we have a positive attitude about life, give us a pat on the back.  If you don’t, I’ll punch you in the cervix.

Last Graduation

Last September, I moved from teaching high school history and psychology to teaching ESL in the elementary school.  I taught high school for twenty years, starting in the English department and then moving to social studies.  In those twenty years, I don’t know how many high school graduations I have attended, but it is a lot– more than the average 52-year-old, I would bet.  Today I attended yet another, maybe my last.

High school graduations are bittersweet when your child is graduating and tedious when you are just a spectator.  After seeing around three of them,  I came to the understanding that all high school commencement addresses are basically the same.  The students try to jazz  up the ceremony by throwing beach balls in the air, or shooting silly string at each other, not realizing– or not caring– that their “rebellions” are just like every other class’s rebellions.  As my principal once said “They think they are being original, but it gets old so fast.”  

As a teacher, graduations are moments to support your former students, cheer them on, and perhaps, if you are lucky, give them a hug or pose for a picture with them after the ceremony.  Usually, as a teacher, I would find myself wandering around the grounds of Tanglewood looking for students who I hoped to connect with, and then giving up as the masses of family members swallowed up their kids.  If a student saw me in town later and said “Did you go to graduation?” I could at least say yes, honestly.

As a parent, graduation became more loaded.  Knowing the personalities of the students that I taught as well as my own daughter’s ups and downs through those four years made the bittersweetness even more sharp.   Sometimes our “brightest and best” can be entitled, devious cut-throats, while those who barely pass our classes are the ones working the hardest with the most integrity in the face of horrible odds.  Being a teacher in my child’s high school brought all this to light, and it was sometimes difficult to watch.

My son’s graduation was even more challenging.  My husband died May 24th, 2011.  My son’s graduation was two weeks later.  I don’t know how he walked across that stage– I think we were all on auto-pilot.  All I remember is watching him walk by in the procession and feeling so immensely proud of him, and then gathering with my family for pictures.  When I look at those pictures now, we all look pale and shell-shocked.

In the years after Anson’s death, I tried to avoid going to graduation at all.  My principal wanted teachers to walk in with the students and to wear our gowns and hoods.  I went a couple of times after Anson died, and it was painful.  The memories of that 2011 ceremony lingered in the auditorium, and all around me were happy, celebrating extended families.   Parents behind me would be chattering about the wonderful colleges their kids were going to while my kids struggled to finish community college in the midst of their grief over their father’s death.  Afterwards, I would wind my way through the crowds of smiling families, trying to make it back to my car alone.  I might go to one graduation party where I would awkwardly try to make conversation with a lump in my throat from the memories welling up.

This is my first year as a teacher in the elementary school, but my students from last year graduated today and one in particular begged me to attend. She was salutatorian, and I felt like I should go and hear her speech.  She invited me to her party afterwards as well, and I agreed to go.  The day was cool and rainy, as usual, and as I listened to her speech, I grew more and more cold and uncomfortable.  The memories were creeping back and I didn’t want to navigate through the crowds of celebrating families, so I snuck out after the speeches.  I went home and closed my eyes for a few minutes to regroup, and then I headed out to her party.

As soon as my GPS told me to turn left on route 23, I knew where it was taking me.  East toward the town Anson and I lived in until the kids were 8 and 11 years old.  Down the road I used to drive on when I took them to school.  Past houses I used to look at and think “maybe we could buy that house” when we lived in a cramped little four-room cottage.  Turn right onto County Road and when the GPS said “You have reached your destination,” I was across the street from the spot where Anson’s car veered off the road, hit a tree, flipped over, and landed top down in someone’s yard.

“Well, of course” I thought.  Let’s make this a complete package with a nice little bow on top.  The whole shebang.  Graduation and a drive down memory lane, ending here.

The party was lovely in spite of the pouring rain.  My former students were thrilled to see me, and the salutatorian sat with me and chatted and told her family that I am “an amazing woman.”  I gave her my full attention, asking about her year, her prom, her plans for the summer and for next year.  We took photos with silly props.  We hugged.  We promised to have lunch before she went away to college.  As I backed my car out of the yard, my tire spun and I thought I would be stuck in the mud.  “No please,” I begged silently, driving a little farther forward and then hitting the accelerator hard to back out over the muddy spot.  I made it, and shook my head at the miserable weather and swallowed the lump that was threatening to form in my throat.  I drove past all the memories again, this time heading the other direction.  Heading away.  Moving forward.

This is not a story about my colonoscopy…

This is not a story about my colonoscopy, but there is a colonoscopy in it. Actually, there are two.  The story begins in 2006 when my late-husband, Anson, turned 50.  When you turn 50–just something for those of you under 50 to look forward to– the universe rewards you with an invitation to join AARP and a reminder to get your first colonoscopy.  I drove Anson to the hospital, dropped him off, did some shopping, and went to pick him up two hours later.  He was lying on a bed wearing a johnny in a room with other patients and I remember the room smelling vaguely like…well, farts.  He was groggy and uncomfortable, and I felt sorry for him lying there.  This was the most vulnerable I had ever seen him–drugged, half-naked, surrounded by strangers in a room smelling like farts.  When he felt clear-headed enough to get dressed, we left the hospital and went right to his favorite diner for lunch.

Five years later, I was a widow.  The surrealism of the years just after Anson’s death are difficult to describe.  The pain, the loneliness, the profundity of grief are too great for me to go into here.   Suffice to say that there are thousands of details about life that you don’t think about when you are married but that suddenly come to the surface as a widow.  Who do I call to fix the drier?  If my car is being repaired, who will drive me to work?  Will anyone want to date me now that I’m 46?  Is there anything I can do about the skin on my neck? Does anyone realize how lucky they are to be alive?  And for some reason, one of the questions that bothered me the most was “Who will drive me home from my colonoscopy?”

I actually brought this question up with a man I dated shortly after Anson died.  This man had never been married, had no children, and was five years younger than me.  When I told him that I worried about who would drive me home from my colonoscopy, he grimaced.  “I don’t even want to think about that stuff– I do enough of that for my mom, I don’t need to do that for my girlfriend.”  Needless to say, that relationship didn’t last long.

I’ve said many times since Anson died that I feel like my foundation is gone.  When you are married, even if it is a difficult marriage, there is a sense of continuity, of stability.  You have a go-to person, and if your spouse can’t help you with a certain task, they can at least help you find a stand in.  As a widow, I feel like each scenario is up in the air– who do I ask for help?  And if I ask person A for help this time, I’ll have to find person B for next time so that I don’t wear out my friends’ goodwill.   Who among my friends would be kind enough to meet me at the hospital and see me half-naked in a room that smelled like farts?

Last year, I turned 50.  I got my AARP invitation and my colonoscopy notice.  My health insurance company even offered me a $50 gift card if I got the colonoscopy within a year!  What a deal!  Because I am a “good patient,” I scheduled the consultation and procedure right away.  My 21-year-old son agreed to drop me off at the hospital and pick me up a few hours later.  The preparation was no fun, in spite of all the peach iced tea and Sprite I bought to try to make it more enjoyable.

On the day of the procedure, as I lay on the gurney waiting for the gastroenterologist to begin, I fought back tears.  Lying on a table in a hospital johnny open in the back, surrounded by strangers and cold machines made me feel vulnerable and small.  I didn’t want the anesthesiologist or nurses to think that I was scared– I wasn’t afraid of the procedure.  I just hated the fact that I was alone.  I had been there for Anson when he came out of the anesthesia.  Why couldn’t someone be there for me?

But anesthesia today is so lovely!  One deep breath and I was out.  I woke up a few minutes later in the recovery area– no nausea like I remembered from the anesthesia of my youth.  The nurses were warm and funny and they were checking on me and bringing me water.  They told me to go ahead and fart– it was good to fart!  But the room didn’t smell bad the way I had remembered with Anson’s procedure.  There were other patients around me; some had friends picking them up, some had spouses, some had adult children.  I had survived! I actually felt great.  And all these people, at different phases of later adulthood, with different life situations– we all had found rides home.   The nurse called my son; he was on his way to get me, so I got dressed and waited for him.  Other than riding down to his car in a wheelchair, I felt as normal as could be.

So it was over.  My first colonoscopy! (By the way,  SURPRISE! You have to have one EVERY FIVE YEARS!!!) I had done it without a spouse or a boyfriend to drive me home.  It was not a big deal.  So, this is not a story about my colonoscopy.  I had been a widow for four years, and this is a story about learning that  I was going to be okay, alone.