Nine a.m., Sunday morning. The phone
rings. I open my eyes and see the lace curtainsbright white,
after my mother washed them on my spring-cleaning-birthday-present
day-fill up from the spring breeze. I shut my eyes. The phone
rings again. The third time I get up.
It's my mother. She's on her cell phone, in the car, with my
nephew in the backseat. They are on their way to church.
"You're coming. Right?" she announces.
"Actually, no."
She
makes a noise somewhere between a sigh and a grunt. "But I need
you to round people up for the meeting," she says, referring to
a church committee we co-chair, but which hasn't even met once yet.
"I have a ton of papers to grade, and I'm already so behind
I can't see straight. You do it."
"I'll be in Sunday school."
"Ma, come on. You just gotta leave him there. The other kids
are going to make fun of him if he can't go to Sunday school without
his Grandma."
Her voice starches up. "He asked me to stay and you know I
can't say no."
"Right."
I look in the bathroom mirror. During the night, my eyes have
puffed up and have developed bags underneath. My hair needs washing,
and church starts in 45 minutes. I pull my hair up in an elastic
band and struggle to pull on a pair of jeans I've just inherited
from my stepmother. God. They're a full size bigger than the ones
I had been wearing. I grab a big baggy blue sweater that looks made
from bumpy bedspread material.
At church, I slide into the pew next to my mother. She looks
almost frail in her pale mauve blouse and beige polyester pants.
Lately, each week she's shed more pounds since she has recently
acquired a boyfriend. She says, "love makes me lose weight." She
is dabbing at her eyes with a wad of tissue. During the moment of
silence she whispers that she "did it," that is left my four and
a half year old nephew at Sunday school by himself, but the teacher
said something to him in what seemed to her like a mean voice. She
dabs again with the tissue. "It made me cry," she says, as her face
crumples.
"Get over it, Ma," I whisper back. "He'll be fine by himself."
"Maybe, but that's a parent's job, to leave him there and tell
him he has to stay. And I only had four hours sleep last night."
Of course, date night again. How could I forget? Maybe because
I'd spent the evening sharing wine and Indian food with two single
friends. Meanwhile my mother is starring in Sex in Her 70s.
The minister is delivering the sermon. "Why do you look for
the living among the dead?" This is the question to the women who
came to look for Christ and found the tomb empty. "We, too, may
also be looking for life in the wrong places," the minister says.
"Where are you looking for life?"
We sing a hymn. My mother leans over.
"Are you coming for dinner before the meeting?"
"Probably not. I have to meet with students."
She screws up her face and opens her eyes wider. "You will
not leave me alone at this meeting. I am not a talker."
During prayer time, I pray for my former boyfriend who is moving
back to France and battling cancer. Then I pray for my most recent
former boyfriend, the one who sent me an enormous romantic birthday
card, then called a few days later to say his old girlfriend had
moved back into his house, and that he had been powerless to stop
her. "Help them both to be happy and get what they need," I think.
This last bit I cribbed from a Buddhist nun at the meditation
group where I drop in sometimes. I've been on a bit of a spiritual
quest, and so far it has produced my latest theory, which is that
God is like ice cream, and religions the flavors. Lately, I've been
having my Christianity with a blend-in of Buddhism. The Buddhists
believe that people don't have a separate self, that we're all part
of a larger whole, and the way to enlightenment is to show compassion
toward every living thing. I have a hard time with the no-unique-self
thing, especially after all the time in therapy trying to build
up a self, but I am into the part-of-the-larger whole idea.
In fact, I have momentsodd, pure, clear moments, sometimes
in churchwhen I sense, solidly and from somewhere inside me,
that I am part of something. I feel not alone, and like maybe
what's inside me could even be God.
Next, I pray for everyone to be healthy, and for God to help
me be the person I should become. Finally, I ask to be able to get
everything done without going nuts, since I've been too damn busy
to wash the dishes, mow the lawn, or make it to the Buddhist group
to meditate on having a mind as deep and calm as the ocean. I do
not ask for help with the low-carb diet I am embarking on; I fear
that's too mundane.
A musical sound tinkles from my mother's purse. She dives in,
roots around, and pulls out her cell phone, encased in a furry pouch
so that it looks like a baby squirrel on the seat cushion. It keeps
ringing. I open it.
I hear my sister's voice. "Hello, hello!"
I close it and it rings again. "Hello, hello!" She's louder
this time.
"I don't know how to turn it off," my mother says.
Since I have the same phone, I know that turning it off will
make another musical noise, so I take it outside, ignore my sister's
voice still hollering hello, and press the power button.
I come back inside and sit down again. I can feel the waistband
of the jeans dig into my stomach. The minister is saying she's so
excited about spring, with its promise of renewal and new growth,
and hope.
During the offering, my mother says to me, "You know there
is a church council meeting the night after our meeting."
"I might not be able to go," I say. "I have to be at school."
She screws up her face again. "I should have never let
you talk me into this committee crap," she says. She is not really
whispering now.
I say nothing.
During the last hymn she leans over again. "So, you staying
for coffee?"
I shove the hymnal in front of both our faces and hiss
at her. "No, Mom, I have too fucking much to do to stay for
coffee, which you might know if you ever thought of asking me how
I am." I have never before said the f-word in church.
She gets up. The tears drip down. "That's it. I'm not staying
here," she says. She shoves past me out of the pew, dabbing at her
eyes with the wet ball of tissue.
I stand and sing and touch the fat roll around my waist.
It reminds me, in case I was wondering, that today I am thoroughly
unlikable.
After the service, I do my rounding up of committee people.
I don't take a cookie from the paper plate. Instead I go for a tiny
cup of water from the cooler.
Outside, I walk across the parking lot toward the Sunday
school building. She and my nephew are coming out. I ask him how
Sunday school went.
"It was great. We did drawing, and play-doh, and a game!"
He turns and waves his coloring paper in the air at another similar-sized
kid trailing his mother out of the building. "Bye-bye! See you next
time," he crows. He grabs my hand. "Come on," he says, tugging me
down the grassy hill, "I want to show you the room where we have
Sunday school."
He points inside the sliding glass door to a room with
long, low tables, and tiny chairs. I point to the room next door.
"Here's the room where I went to Sunday school when I was a kid,"
I say.
"Before I was born?" His voice rises to a higher pitch
at the end of the sentence. "Is this where you went to Sunday school
before I was born?" he singsongs again.
Yes, and after Sunday school I went to church with my grandfather,
where we sat in the same straight-backed pews and I leaned my face
against the scratchy sleeve of his suit coat. My grandmother sang
in the choir, and always looked regal in her long black robe and
dangly earrings as she processed precisely down the aisle each week.
My gray-haired uncle with the glasses came from his house next door
every week too, and every week he gave me an especially shiny quarter.
My mother, who was still married to my father at the time, was at
home, doing yard workor God knows what, I guess with
my father.
When I came back to church after many years away, at a
difficult time in my life, it felt safe and comforting to be there
with people I had grown up with, people who knew my grandparents.
It felt good to walk down the same little hill toward church next
to what used to be my uncle and aunt's house and to see the hedge
bounding the cemetery where my grandparents and all my grandfather's
brothers and sisters and parents are buried.
"You want a ride on my shoulders?" I ask my nephew.
"Suuure," he says, stretching the word out in his sing-song
way so his voice goes up now in the middle. I hoist him up and carry
him to his car seat. I make sure to stick my cold hands under his
shirt. He wiggles and giggles.
Behind me, where I can't see her, my mother says, "I'm
sorry I didn't ask about all you have going on."
"That's ok," I say, keeping my head down. "I'm sorry for
being so nasty. I'm just feeling fat and stressed-out and unloved."
Then I turn toward my own car, so she can't see my eyes fill up.
On my way home, I start to feel better, so I take another
stab at the prayer thing. Maybe I'm talking to God, maybe myself,
maybe both, I think. "Thank you for my family," I say almost out
loud. Then, as I pull up to the cheap gas place to fill up the tank
for the coming week, "And I could use some help with the diet too."
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