FRESH
YARN presents:
Saturday
By Meredith
Hoffa
Just because
it looked like I was having fun doesn't mean I was.
Saturdays
were not fun.
Sure, there
was no school, but a day off of school didn't in and of itself necessarily
constitute "fun." If you were me, anyway. And, say, eight.
Did I appreciate
the two hours of Saturday morning cartoons I was allowed to watch?
(And did I especially appreciate the commercials because I could memorize
them and re-create them in the form of stirring one-acts for the Nobles
Day Camp Annual Talent Show?) Yes. (And yes.) But fun? Not exactly. And
likewise, while I enjoyed Jazz dance class at the J.C.C. (think:
rainbow bandanas, Lionel Ritchie), still, it couldn't qualify as pure
fun. Even Saturday afternoons, when I'd play with friends -- friends whose
homes had Atari and chewy granola bars -- it was entertaining,
but I just wasn't capable of letting go and having real, unadulterated
fun.
Because you
can't have fun when you're terrified, and frankly, Saturdays terrified
me.
See, lurking
in the wings all day Saturdays were Saturday Nights. The night my parents
went out. Every single week. And yet every single week I'd find myself
filled with an acute separation anxiety, a vile Saturday Night Feeling,
an aching in my solar plexus that served to define for my little self
the very concept of desperation.
I can't pinpoint
the reason for the anxiety on Saturday nights specifically as opposed
to other times of the week when my parents went out. But I do know there
was a conditioning over time, a Pavlovian sort of thing where Saturday's
typical sounds and smells and vibe just began to bring on The Feeling
as a matter of course.
My fear was
that my parents would head out on a Saturday night date and never come
back.
Not by choice,
of course. I knew they'd never actively run away from home, what withal
how much they loved me plus how remarkable I was at singing certain numbers
from Annie.
No, my panic
arose from the notion that something out of their control would happen
to them out in the vast nightness of Saturday. Like a kidnapping -- a
crime about which I was quite savvy thanks to a number of made-for-TV
movies. I fully got that my parents could be snatched from a parking garage,
a restaurant, even somewhere as "innocent" as the coatroom at
a bar mitzvah. And then I'd be orphaned. And then what? Would my brother
and I have to go live with Aunt Margie in alarmingly meat-filled Chicago?
Would we bring our stuff or would we have to buy all new stuff, made in
Chicago? And what of my parents? Would they be held captive somewhere
terrifying? Like a 14-passenger van? Would they be bound with duct tape
in a painful manner?
Or
then again
perhaps it wouldn't be a kidnapping at all. See, unfortunately
there were a million different things that could befall them. Take the
movie The Earthling in which Ricky Schroder is orphaned when his
parents' Winnebago careens off a cliff and explodes. Who's to say the
same couldn't happen to my parents' Toyota? Boston didn't seem to have
any cliffs but I wasn't stupid enough to think that meant there weren't
any.
So every
Saturday brought me back to the same routine. By mid-afternoon, a gnawing
sense of dread would have engulfed me and I'd have to go find my mom.
If it were summer I could usually find her in the yard reading the Boston
Globe and drinking a Tab. Winter, somewhere else drinking a Tab.
"So
about tonight
would you say your plans are 100% definite?" That's
how I'd start.
Much of my
interrogation would focus on their estimated time of return. "OK,
now, when you say 'midnight at the latest' does that mean that it will
not for any reason be one second later than midnight?"
It didn't,
by the way. But I was all about semantics, trying to ensnare my mom with
technicalities wherever possible. "Aha! You said 'late tonight' but
then you said '1:00 a.m.' Hate to break it to you, but 1:00 a.m. is not
tonight, it's tomorrow. So
yeah."
Early evening
my parents would head upstairs to shower, signaling my anxiety to careen
towards its manic peak. Shower-time meant that we were rumbling towards
evening as planned, all systems go. The chance of something happening
in the external world to change my parents' plans -- hail, say, or a nuclear
attack on my neighborhood by the Soviets -- was increasingly slim. While
my mom dressed I'd be basically in the fetal position on her bed.
"Mom?"
My voice would come out all high and thin. "I didn't tell you this
earlier because I didn't want to ruin your day, but
I'm developing
a rash."
She'd be
busy rummaging through her jewelry box for the perfect dangly earrings.
Dangly earrings were expressly a going-out accessory. So I hated them.
"Mom?
There's pus."
No reaction!
I'd press on.
"And
also, I'm nauseous."
It always
felt weird to use the word "nauseous" because I wasn't 100%
clear on the pronunciation, but it was a four-star word, so I went for
it.
My mom would
finally press her hand to my forehead. "Hmmmm. Maybe there's a little
ice cream in your bangs? I'd really recommend a shampoo, honey."
When
she'd spray on her perfume -- Estee Lauder Youth Dew -- I'd become dizzy
with terror. The same way every movie trailer has its theme song, Estee
Lauder Youth Dew was the theme smell of My Parents Going Out. That smell
along with the sound of her high heels clicking away
there was nothing
left to do but cry in bitter defeat.
Sometimes
if I got tired of hearing my own sobs I'd vaguely experiment with different
crying styles, like ones I'd recently seen on TV or in the movies. Like
in The Champ Ricky Schroder had a really wet cry, so I might smear
my tears over my chin and forehead -- just to try it on.
Eventually
I'd mope off to find my younger brother J.O. who could usually be found
in the basement with his WWF figures.
J.O. never
seemed to detect that I was out of my head. He'd peer at me from under
his heavy-lidded brown eyes. "You wanna be Brutus Beefcake?"
Really I
just wanted to be by him, to just sit there while he played and breathed.
It was soothing, the smacking sound the wrestlers made as they smashed
into one another.
Debbie was
our top-ranked sitter. Debbie was seventeen. Debbie had a big smile and
great barrettes. And the truth was, I couldn't help but like her. She
always had something extremely nice to say to me.
For example,
there was a long period during which I sported just long t-shirts, underwear,
and jellies -- no pants. Some people, including my parents, raised their
snobby eyebrows at this, but not Debbie. She'd just be like "Hey,
I like your dress!" Same went for my Injury-Envy phase when I'd go
around with Band-Aids plastered to my face. My dad thought the look "unintelligent,"
but Debbie would just say, "great face!" And really mean it.
And when I'd straighten out paper clips and fasten them across my top
teeth to simulate a retainer, Debbie would comment that my orthodontia
was cool. That Debbie. She was very disarming.
Plus, in
an odd way, Debbie's arrival provided me some relief because I finally
had a target for all my panicky energy. Her presence took my mind off
kidnappings and images of Toyotas tumbling into rocky ravines.
My parents
would slip out and Night would officially begin once Debbie, J.O. and
I were hunkered down in the TV room. Bathed in yellow light and filled
with our raucous banter, the TV room on these nights felt less like a
TV room and more like one of those cozy, boisterous rooms on an old-timey
ship where the guys would to go to smoke cigars and drink whiskey and
discuss ladies while having the best time ever.
For hours
I'd be madcap, feverishly entertaining my audience of one, not unlike
that jazz-dancing frog. During Solid Gold I'd whip my hair around
and do knee-slides on the shag, ignoring massive swaths of carpet burn.
During commercials I'd dart in and out of the room, bringing in anything
that might possibly blow Debbie's mind such as platters of microwaved
foods, stickers, high-class pencils, a game I created that was about how
many pepperoncinis I could put in my mouth at once; headstands were involved
as were the splits, pig latin, and putting the cat in a cabbage patch
diaper. There'd be sleights of hand, Rockette kicks, Barbie buzz cuts,
and climbing the doorjamb to touch the ceiling. I was fueled by something
superhuman. It was pretty awesome.
During the first fifteen minutes of The Love Boat, J.O. would fall
asleep on the floor, and Debbie and I would head into my room where we'd
engage in my favorite activities such as writing Ricky Schroder letters
and taking arresting photographs of me that I could include in my letters
to Ricky Schroder.
After Captain
Stubing and the gang moved on to bluer waters for the week, I'd help Debbie
drag J.O. to bed, but the minutes would pass too quickly and then we were
done and then I'd be tucked in bed and left alone. To wait.
From my bed
I could see the yellowy light in the TV room and knew that Debbie and
her big smile and her great barrettes were in there and Saturday Night
Live was on.
The feelings
of the afternoon would wash back over me and suddenly again I'd be drowning.
If I sat up I could breathe better and if I could breathe better I could
think better about where my parents might be that very instant. It was
all about my exceptional ears; I'd memorized the exact sound my parents'
car made and could ID it from blocks away.
I'd will
them to come home so hard that I thought I might pass out and how weird
would that be to pass out in bed while Debbie and her great barrettes
watched SNL and laughed.
I'd try to
remember from The Earthling the exact sound Ricky's parents' Winnebago
had made when it tumbled off the cliff but I could never quite conjure
it so I'd just listen for anything and everything, so much so that I'd
be startled by the sound of my parents inside the house. Downstairs, their
shoes tapping, their voices giggling. And then the sound of Debbie scrawling
out a note to me on the chalkboard outside my door. In the morning I'd
see it -- her perfect, loopy cursive. "See you next Saturday."
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