I never would've picked her to be
part of my family. She smoked. Her dish towels were dingy. She'd married two
alcoholics she'd met in taverns, both of whom abandoned her with little kids
and she'd never sought child support. Her pets had fleas. She left the TV on
all night and let her dog sleep with its head on her pillow. She had a foolish
phobia about flying, which meant three-day expensive ferry rides (she was
broke; we paid) to come see us, rather than a few hours by jet. She was a pack
rat. (We found her 35-year-old son's fourth grade report card in a kitchen
drawer after she died.) Her hairstyle was outdated, an ageless honey bouffant,
which she aerosoled daily, washed and set once a week by a girl who had a chair
in her house on one of the dairy farms down the road.
But my mother-in-law turned out to
be the perfect poultice for my sometimes-raw disposition.
The first night I met her, she came
to dinner at my apartment with her son, my lover at the time, whom she was
visiting from out-of-state. I'd made a cold plum soup which pretty much
presented like a placenta in a bowl.
"Now, this looks interesting," she
observed sincerely, as she nudged the lumps with her spoon. "Is this fruit?"
That was about the most critical
thing she ever said to me.
However, once many years later (I
think the twins were eight) when we sat together in the far back of a mini-van
we'd rented for a family vacation, she ventured, "May I make a suggestion?"
She never had offered the slightest
direction on how to run our family, except once to recommend that we'd have
better luck selling it later if we bought a three-bedroom house instead of a
two-bedroom one - and she was a real estate agent at the time. So,
naturally, I was intrigued by this hint of intrusion.
"Sure. What?"
"Have you thought about a religious
education for the children?"
Well, no, we hadn't. Ever. Our
children never had been baptized, never been to Sunday school. We simply
thought if you lived honestly and compassionately every day, that was good
enough.
I didn't say that to her, though. I
was too stunned by what she'd said. Not only because she'd always graciously
minded her own business, but, moreover, in the ten years I'd known her, she'd
never once uttered or done a single thing that could possibly have been interpreted
in even a remotely spiritual way. I had a distinct recollection of my husband
telling me he'd been lured to Sunday school by neighbors promising the
incentive of learning to paddle a canoe. She never went though. The words "god"
nor "church" ever had insinuated themselves into any conversation I'd had with
her.
"I don't get it," I replied, after
I shared my philosophy of living values daily. "You never took your kids to
church and all three turned out to be good people. Why does that matter to you
now?"
"It's just something I wish I'd
given them she said. "Another part of life that they would have."
Was she talking about faith? This
woman who'd spent the last weeks of her second pregnancy in an iron lung to
survive polio and then, with two babies - one of whom would endure years of
Shriner's charity surgeries for hips deformed by the in-utero disease - would
have to crawl backwards down the basement stairs, dragging the dirty diaper
hamper down one step at a time while her used car salesman husband was out
drinking and tooling around in hotrods. It wasn't some church that got her
through that.
Ironically, her succor likely was
that which tormented her most: her mother. My husband's grandmother - regal,
vain, literate, overbearing - had earned a college degree in journalism in the
1920s and had been the star of a popular Portland afternoon radio program,
accompanied by a live ensemble, including a harpist. Her third husband was a
well-to-do telephone company lobbyist with whom she entertained movers and shakers
in the ritzy enclaves of the capital. She was mortified at her only child's
choice for matrimony. This acned charmer unquestionably was trouble. When he
pulled out five years later, leaving little ones behind, her scorn did not
pre-empt her begrudging help. But financial support to her daughter came with
an unending litany of "suggestions" and prescriptions for improvement.
"You'll want the blue woven woods
for your window treatments. Don't you think that plastic tablecloth is too
tacky? Do you want me to polish that silver if you're not going to get to it?
Did you mean to have this much mayonnaise in the potato salad? I'll bring over
my good dishes so you have something nice for the table. Why don't you get your
hair done where I go? The spoon goes against the flat outside edge of the
knife. The boys should tuck their shirts in."
No wonder her daughter was
practically paralyzed. She had been flayed by the withering, love-leeching
sting of relentless reproach. Fortunately for everyone else she cared about, my
mother-in-law refused to visit that on others. She was one of the few people
I've ever known who truly, unconditionally accepted others. In person, in
letters, in phone calls, she radiated warmth, interest, acceptance,
encouragement, and congratulation. She never brought it up, but of course she
already learned the toughest lesson there is: you can survive almost anything,
even your mother looking through you.
Maybe that realization gave her
some peace, like a final surrender, like giving in or going under. Or, maybe
years of emotional erosion, like the Pacific breakers which beat against the
Three Arch Cape Rocks where she had moved (and where her widowed mother
followed her), had left her heart so tenderly exposed that she simply couldn't
muster a discouraging word toward another living being. Like the dull beach
pebbles she scoured during long walks alone and then pummeled into glossy,
gorgeous agates after weeks of tumbling in an electric sand-filled drum, her
lovely facets shone. Whatever its genesis, acceptance was her faith and savior,
from what I could tell. Generosity of spirit was her unspoken but adhered-to
personal gospel. One I had dishonored.
At the close of one of our stays
with her in her little two-bedroom Farmers Home house overlooking the bay (as
usual, she'd given me and my husband the privacy of her room, her bed, while
she slept on the couch) I was packing. The room seemed dim as I matched socks
and tucked children's outfits together. I was appalled to see the glass fixture
shielding the single overhead bulb was filthy. She hadn't washed it in years. I
mean, really, what kind of person doesn't notice that? I cautiously climbed up
on the bed, and reaching unsteadily, unscrewed the center knob, carefully lowering
the square pane. I took it to the bathroom and closed and locked the door. I
ran hot water from the tub, kneeled down, and repeatedly rinsed the glass,
using Kleenex to scrub the sticky parts and to dry it. But the mattress was too
unstable for me to thread the fob onto the bolt while balancing the shiny
translucent tray with my other hand. Then his mom walked in. She was in
mid-sentence: "I think that load in the dryer is done, honey. Do you want me to
fold . . .?" She instantly calculated what had transpired. I felt callous and
ashamed.
"That fixture looked a little
wobbly," I sputtered sheepishly as I lowered myself to the bed. "When I tried
to tighten it, it came off and now I can't get it back on."
"Well, thank you," she said. "I'll
bet that darn thing probably needed a good washing didn't it? Don't you worry
about it. I'm sure we can get it back on." She left to enlist my husband.
As I waited, washed with guilt, I
was reminded of a reporter friend who, eager for an encore conjugal tryst, had
traveled to the showplace home of a renowned photographer she'd met on
assignment. When she arrived, he had waiting for her on the large coffee table
in the sumptuous living room a new toothbrush. "It looked like you needed a
replacement," he told her. She never went back. "How can you have a
relationship with someone like that?" she had asked me rhetorically. For an
answer, she probably should have asked my husband.
In that moment, slumped next to the
open suitcase, I experienced a transcendent humility inspired by the gentle
grace my mother-in-law practiced that I did not possess.
Now, jouncing along next to her in
the van on a rural road, while the kids bickered in front of us, I worried
whether she suspected there was something deficient in the upbringing of our
children. I was a little alarmed. The scarcity of her judgment made it
precious.
"Don't you think just loving
someone is enough," I asked her.
"I don't know," she said.
The next time religion arose was at
her funeral not too many years later. That evening, I l shaded my eyes to watch
my brother-in-law tiller his skiff into the blinding blaze the of setting sun
and the trio of siblings' silhouettes taking turns tipping her wispy remains
over the gunnels. I recalled the inspiration I'd experienced trudging along
that blustery shore the day before.
"Where I would see rocks, she saw
agates," I had preached to the congregants clustered amongst the folding
chairs, like birds on a wire: couples she'd sold homes to, bank tellers who'd
worked for her years ago, fellow boosters from the Chamber's Dairy Days
committee, neighbors to whom she'd ministered during divorces or deaths or
whose summer homes she'd kept an eye on during the brittle winter months; her
hairdresser.
Inside the postcard-size program,
with a generic seaside sunset copied on the front, was a poem I'd found that
morning while sorting through the drawers in her bedroom vanity. It was a small
piece of paper, neatly folded in half, amidst unopened boxes of Christmas cards
she'd purchased from disabled veterans' groups, a salad of ancient receipts,
and jumbled nests of cheap jewelry and chintzy mementos her kids and grandkids
had given her. She had written in her lovely, leaning handwriting on
ocean-azure stationery imprinted with a white seagull aloft in the corner.
In five rhyming stanzas she
captured the crashing magic of the coast. The final verse felt like something so
intimate revealed:
We'll stand in awe that rocks and
sand
Were fashioned by a Wondrous Hand
And give thanks that the mystic sea
Is God's most precious legacy.
I would miss her legacy: her
grace, not certain where to find it on my own.
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