FRESH
YARN presents:
Tell
You Later
By Nancy
Neufeld Callaway
My mother.
The one woman I love more than any in the world, calls me in the middle
of a crazy day at work and tells me with great urgency that I need to
drive over to her house -- a solid thirty minutes of bumper-to-bumper
L.A. freeway traffic -- because she has something extremely important
to tell me. Normally I would have ignored this kind of call but seeing
as how she was in the middle of dying, I felt like I needed to pay attention.
I'd recently
become engaged and, of course, she was the first person I called, both
giddy, and sobbing, after my fiancé whisked me away to Queens,
New York, and proposed to me on my 30th birthday. He serenaded me with
an original tune under the Unisphere, a giant architecturally-pleasing
metal globe primarily known because it commemorates the site of the 1964
World's Fair -- or because you saw aliens crash into it in Men in Black
-- depending on your demo. Regardless, only moments after I shared my
excitement with her, she told me that she too had some very important
words she needed to share with me. Marriage words. Life words. Words about
my future, she said to me, as I called her from the taxi that night on
my cell phone. "Just some things you need to know. But not now, not
on the phone."
It sounded
a little like that time I'd arrived home from school on my 12th birthday,
and my mom told me she had "some important things to discuss with
me." I cringed because I knew from the tone exactly where she was
going with it. But before we could have our "discussion," I
went upstairs to change out of my school clothes, and there, sitting on
my bed, was a giant ominous box. Not a wrapped birthday box. I
gently lifted up the teensiest corner of the lid as if some deadly creature
lay inside, only to find what I already knew was there. It was stuffed
to the gills with girlie things. You know, for that time of the month.
Pink pads of all shapes and sizes, straps with hangie down snaps and loops,
complete with instruction packets. I slammed it shut. I was 12. What did
she think I was? Eleven? I quickly shouted downstairs, "I already
know this stuff. Duuuuuhhhh." And she shouted back, "Good, I
thought so," and suddenly, we were done.
So sitting
in that New York taxi on my 30th birthday, I was suddenly 12 again. True,
there was certainly a lot to talk about. I was, oh my god, 30. I was getting
married. My future husband wasn't hugely successful, or independently
wealthy, or more importantly, Jewish. All that definitely left a lot of
room for discussion. So I tucked the moment away and waited for the appropriate
time to hear those words my mom had been so carefully saving for me all
these years.
When I returned
home to Los Angeles, I reminded her of our unfinished phone conversation
from the cab in Queens, and asked her if she wanted to talk now, or maybe
find a time to talk later. She opted for the "later" and so
--
Only a month
after her urgent "come over right away" phone call, I find myself
racing like a maniac across the city to my mother's house. I can't help
but wonder
maybe she is finally going to tell me something important.
That THING. And knowing that my window of wisdom is very small right now
-- with only months for her to live after having been diagnosed with inoperable
stage 4 lung cancer -- and with her only daughter's wedding to plan, and
me having my own job to do, and an inconsolable father to take care of,
and brothers to resolve long overdue mother issues with, I drive 90 miles
an hour across town because now, more than ever, I need a guru. And tampons,
but we'd already covered that.
So there
I get. And there she lies. In bed. Skeletal. Transparent skin. Exhausted
from the chemo and radiation. From the pain. From vomiting. From lack
of decent sleep. And even though I tried, up until now, nothing I did
seemed to help. I moved in with her. Fed her, washed her, took her to
all her doctor appointments. Made her laugh, or tried to. Made her cry,
by mistake. Grew Kombucha mushrooms. Found her a bona fide healer. An
acupuncturist. Nutritionist. Herbalist. Found her every single season
of M*A*S*H* because she loved the show -- only to have her start
confusing me with Gary Berghoff and begin calling me Radar. (Hey, at least
I wasn't Klinger.)
I
helped her pound down mounds of shark cartilage, then touted as a near-miracle
cure for all cancers. And at one point she looked at me with her sallow,
tired, lifeless eyes as she was spooning in a huge lump of the white powdery
shark cartilage, and she asked me, "So what do you think, if a shark
gets cancer, you think it eats spoonfuls of human cartilage?" Flashing
me that old witty grin, but without the laughter that usually went with
it, because she was just, as we both used to say, "Too pooped to
pop."
I get to her house as quickly as I can, and I gently sit down on her bed,
careful not to jiggle the mattress because the movement could tear more
skin away from her already open bedsores. I try not to look like I'm talking
to someone who's dying because I know that she can tell when I'm giving
her that unbearably sad look. So I act casual, nonchalant, and slowly
I work my way into a somewhat perky, "What is it you wanted to tell
me?"
And she looks at me with utmost concern, with those deep-set, knowing
eyes, with years of experience, and nods up and down. "Not now, I'm
tired. Maybe later."
"Okay,
but
" I begin.
"No,"
she whispers. And she holds my hand, turns her head away from view, and
drifts off to sleep.
To death, I wonder? Or just a nap? I'm not sure. But I sit there motionless
-- for whatever it was going to be. And an hour or so later, she wakes
up, smiles, and asks me if I want to play Rummy Q or Gin -- our games
of choice. Apparently the previous conversation we were about to have
-- never was.
We'd been playing Gin for almost 20 years. When I was around seven, she
taught me Crazy 8's and Go Fish, and soon we moved on to War, my personal
favorite. And then came Gin. We were both good. Though she was better.
And we were both competitive. Though I was more. And somehow, one day
way back when, one of us -- probably me -- started cheating. Just a little.
A tossed card here and there, a peek at her cards. And I only felt a little
guilty because very soon after, I noticed that she was cheating as well,
but not nearly as well as I'd been cheating. And thus began our little
ritual which lasted for many, many years.
And during those last few months, we played a lot of cards. I remember
a good friend telling me how lucky my mom and I were to have all that
time together. To talk about what was important to us, and bond, and make
sure we'd said everything we needed before she died. But that wasn't how
it was. We never talked about anything remotely heavy, for that would
feel like giving up. We talked about little things, the minutia of everyday
life. My mom was not planning on leaving, never accepted her death sentence.
And she was the boss. That's how she lived, and that's how she would --
not live.
One night,
about seven months after she'd first been diagnosed, she and I were sitting
on her bed playing Gin
only a few nights after she'd screamed to
me, "I want to die! And I want you to find out how to do it. Get
a gun and shoot me. It's what I want." But unable to do that, my
father and I turned the dilaudid on her built-in painkiller pack up to
10, enough to relieve all her pain, and possibly kill her -- and luckily,
it did the former. And can I tell you? When she woke up a day later, she
was so happy to be alive. My dad came back into the room, still shaken
by our wrenching night, and told her that he didn't want to live without
her, that he couldn't live without her, and that if she died, he was going
to kill himself. Then she looked at him and responded matter-of-factly,
"Okay." And we just sat with that for a while.
Until later
on that day she and I play more cards. She usually deals, but now even
the smallest effort is too big, so I deal. I pick her cards up backwards,
so I can't see them, fan them out for her, and stick them in her hand.
She looks at her cards and smiles
"Not bad."
I look at
mine too. "Hel--lo ladies," I say, looking at the shittiest
hand I've seen in my entire life. But this was not unfamiliar territory
to me. And we begin playing, and after about five minutes, her drugged
eyes drift shut and she passes out for several minutes, which is something
she has been doing for a few weeks. And while she is "out,"
I quickly put my hand down, take her cards out of her hand, completely
rearrange them, give myself a few better cards, and sit
innocently
waiting for her to come to.
She does.
And she looks at me -- quizzically? Perhaps. Knowingly? Perhaps. And I
say I gotta pee. So I get up, leaving her alone with the cards, and just
enough time to do whatever it is she feels like doing, and when I get
back, she beats the pants off of me. And that is the last game we ever
play.
I cheated on my mom while playing Gin. While she was dying.
And she knew. And I knew. But neither one of us ever said a word. It was
all that we could share together. The only real thing we had left between
us. You want to know what's most sacred? The one thing I've learned that
I'll never forget? I'll tell ya
But not now. Later.
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