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Tea With Dad
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Copyright © 2021 Nancie Laird Young
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data available upon request.
ISBN: 978-1-9505847-6-5
Cover design by Asha Hossain Design LLC
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To Mom and Dad, without whose stories I’d have none
and
To Rachel, Sharon, and Jane, my reasons for everything.
Doubt thou the stars are fire;
Doubt that the sun doth move;
Doubt truth to be a liar;
But never doubt I love.
~ William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act 2, Scene 2
I came to see the damage that was done and the treasures that prevail
—ADRIENNE RICH, Diving into the Wreck
Contents
Preface
Prologue
PART I
1. Permanent Change of Station
2. Packing Up and Moving Out
3. The New Kid
4. Tea and Toast
PART II
5. Mustang
6. Temporary Quarters
7. New Recruit
8. Change of Command
9. Maneuvers
10. Platoon
11. Distaff
PART III
12. Dissension in the Ranks
13. You and Your Mother
14. Don’t Ask, Won’t Tell
PART IV
15. Full Disclosure
16. An Unsatisfactory Situation
17. Need to Know
18. Hail and Farewell
19. Situation Normal
20. Going Dark
21. Let it Come, As it Will
22. Taps
PART V
23. Relata Refero: All the Stories
24. Driving Issues
25. Medical Advisory Team
26. Cared For, Caretaker
27. Bridging the Divide
Epilogue: Riding Shotgun
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Preface
A FEW YEARS AGO, a sudden blizzard in rural Vermont left me and the relatively few travelers remaining on the train I had boarded in Newark that morning stranded for eight hours. Both the main and the backup engines blew after plowing through too many snowdrifts. The train ground to a halt just fifteen or twenty minutes from my intended destination where I had expected to get off the train, jump into a waiting car, ride to a lovely inn geared toward writers, and spend a week’s vacation focused on mapping out a book based on three hundred or so haiku I’d written over the past five years.
After many hours of waiting, during which the excellent Amtrak staff rationed power and fed us snacks of packaged cookies, chips, and bottled water—in between shifts of trying to physically dig us out—an engine was sent from the south to push our train to the side of the main track in order to free the rails for other traffic long enough to allow time for another train to arrive to pull us back onto the main track.
Through that experience I learned the etymology of the word sidetracked, experienced its literal meaning, and began to realize how being sidetracked functioned both negatively and positively in my life.
Eight hours later, the train was moving again, but my destination station was closed and there was no one to meet me. The conductor and I agreed I would disembark in Montpelier, where I’d had enough foresight before my phone battery died to request that my daughter make a hotel reservation for me. I’d arrange for travel back to the inn the next day.
Of the four women staying at the inn that week, three of us had difficulties arriving on time due to the storm, so our host announced that rather than meet for readings the first evening, we’d all get a good night’s sleep, and after a full day’s work the next day, we would gather after dinner to hear what each of us had written.
I followed the group into the Gertrude Stein Salon that first evening and plopped onto the sofa across from the beautiful fire before asking, “What readings?”
I am not sure any of us had read the fine print on the inn’s website as we all seemed surprised and somewhat intimidated at the prospect of reading what we had written. Especially in early drafts. One of the women, my friend Jerilyn Dufresne, with whom I’d planned this retreat, was working on her latest cozy mystery, another was writing an autobiographical novel, and the fourth member of our group planned to gather everything she knew about the trauma she and many women in theater—and the entertainment industry as a whole—had experienced and shape it into some form.
I moved off the main track I’d been on with the haiku book. I could not imagine standing up in front of my friend and these strangers to read a selection of haiku, so I went to bed, got up the next day, and stared at the white screen of my laptop. Then I began to write.
That evening, I read an essay (now a chapter in this book) about the promise I had made to my dying mother to write and deliver her eulogy. I had not anticipated writing that piece or even thinking about that painful memory. I never expected that I could stand in front of anyone to read something so raw and personal. But I did it. Though a very personal experience for me, it seemed to resonate for the others.
For the next week, I put aside my stack of haiku index cards and for at least eight hours a day, sometimes more, I excavated, prodded, and pushed out words, phrases, sentences, and paragraphs that described feelings and experiences long buried in my memory. What I wrote revealed that though I’d been chugging along for some time (some would say successfully), I was far from the destination I’d planned for my life. I began to see my life much like the train ride I’d just been on—a long trip with obstacles in the way of moving forward and times I moved from one track to another to rest, recover, or sometimes reconsider my destination.
That’s how I came write this book, but it does not explain the form it took. My mother’s death and my promise to write and deliver her eulogy, the fact that I did not, and the reasons I assigned for that decision all seemed central to my story at the time. But they were not.
Had I known myself better, I wouldn’t have made the promise. Had I been in better shape emotionally, I’d have been able to see that the reasons I conjured were part of a personal narrative I’d written over the years about who I was and why I was where I was. I would have seen that my story needed a heavy edit.
At the time I saw myself as a huge failure. From the sidetrack I rested on at that moment, I saw my life’s litter on the rails behind me. Two failed marriages, a hopscotch career path, f
inancial problems, and as a sixty-something-year-old woman, I was living with my father. And not because he needed me, but because I needed him. I wasn’t a total loss, but I was pretty much a mess. I could wait for another conductor to call for engines to pull me out, limp along the track I was on—or I could rethink my destination and conduct a new journey myself.
The first stop as I headed out again was to acknowledge and accept that I wanted and needed to have a closer relationship with my father and others. To admit that I needed others. The second was to do the hard work.
I started out slowly and not always smoothly, but eventually I was moving under my own steam again, and this book is about that period of time. Writing about it was part of the process of change, healing, and growth.
There’s a certain accountability in writing a scene, seeing yourself as a character in it, and not liking what you see. As the author, one has a chance to change things because there is distance between the page and a tender heart. Enough distance to dull the pain of critique and judgment. Enough space to see that change is possible and that there are ways to go about it. If one can change it on the page, why not in real life?
In my case, the opportunities for insight and change started over afternoon cups of tea with my father. As we talked and shared our stories, we began to drop the assumptions we had about one another. Each of us began to speak more often about how we’d felt at certain times in the past. We became more comfortable expressing those past feelings and the ones we felt now, too. Most importantly, I think, we began to feel more at ease when the other demonstrated feelings. We learned to hear one another and to trust the other to listen.
Yes. That was it. We learned to trust.
Those conversations began to extend into other times—weekend drives, a regularly scheduled dinner date each week, sitting on a bench at the beach and watching the waves.
I’d always wanted to be with my father to care for him in his later years. I know now that we would have muddled through without this time together; but I cannot imagine that we would have been as comfortable, honest, vulnerable, trusting, or demonstrably loving as we are able to be now. I know I would not have been as settled and happy as I am now.
I recommend sidetracking yourself every now and again. The reasons for doing so may not always be positive ones. But there are benefits if one looks for them. Time. Rest. Opportunities to think, to take in the view both behind you and in front of you, and to plan a new way to your next destination.
August 2020
Prologue
Surrender 2013
FIVE YEARS AFTER I relocated from the Virginia suburbs outside of Washington, DC, to be near my father on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, I picked up the phone and heard his voice. As usual, there was no hello. He never says hello when he makes a call, only if he answers one.
“Hi, Dad!” I said.
“Listen. I want to talk to you about something.”
My father, a retired U.S. Army full colonel, had used that phrase to open conversations with me while I was growing up and even then, at the age of sixty-one, those words still affected me. My brain, if not my body, stood at attention while my emotions screamed, “Incoming!” Then as I struggled to contain the inevitable anxiety that followed, I mobilized as I’d learned to do during my military brat childhood. First, I prepared a defensive position as intel rolled in, just in case one might be in order. Then I held on to my proverbial helmet, hunkered down, and braced myself for what was to come. Curious, yet vigilant.
The past twenty years had been stressful for me; I’d been in “handle what you can, when you can mode” for fifteen of them, which began when my second husband, the person I referred to as my soul mate, the love of my life, disclosed that he was gay. As he and I dealt with that reality while trying to renegotiate our relationship as individuals and parents, I returned to the workforce full-time in my mid-forties after a significant absence. I started a career in the relatively new field of online media (staffed with the very young and brilliant, which I felt did not include me) in order to support my three girls and myself. Then in 2006, my mother died. Two years after her death, I moved (without invitation) closer to my father, motivated by the desire to take care of him if he needed me.
My father’s call was prompted by, yet again, another of my crises. In typical fashion, I had created and then attempted to deal with too many situations that I wasn’t prepared to handle by myself. I’d said nothing when I should have said something. I had not asked for help when I should have. I refused help offered when I should have taken it. Dad was forcing a rescue (whether I had the sense or capacity to ask for one or not). And as he had done several times throughout my life, he intervened just before I hurtled off a cliff.
I ran through all the possible topics Dad might want to discuss. My list of possibilities was long and trailed back to my childhood—possibilities built on a foundation of past situations or recent ones. Yet I suspected that this time money sat at the top of his list. I tried to calculate how many months of rent and utilities I owed him.
Earlier that year, my place of work had notified me that they’d received a garnishment notice from the IRS. They calculated that I would be left with only $800 in each monthly paycheck. That wasn’t enough to cover rent and utilities, let alone other essentials like food, gas, car insurance, phone and internet connections (necessary for my work), medical and dental deductibles, charge account payments, or the college tuition and housing payments for two of my daughters. In addition, my youngest daughter, Jane, attended an out-of-state university and had one semester left to complete before graduation. Then there were the emergencies. I couldn’t remember back to a time in my recent history when there hadn’t been emergencies.
As the representative from the payroll office read the notice to me, waves of shame and embarrassment almost obscured righteous indignation at the government’s lack of consideration for not giving me due notice that they planned to drive me into poverty and demonstrate once again to my father my complete lack of competence at practically everything related to adulting. I swam in a pool concocted of guilt and shame as thick as pitch. I could barely move.
I tried to take comfort in remembering that for the past fifteen years I had survived almost all the experiences on the list of stressors that shorten a human being’s life including four of the top five: marital separation, dissolution of the marriage, my mother’s death, and a serious medical episode of my own.
Until now I’d escaped imprisonment—number three—since I still had a salary to garnish. I admit now to feeling then that ‘three hots and a cot’ in a white-collar federal prison environment sounded more appealing than having my father step in. I heard they had libraries and lots of alone time. I fantasized about working out in the prison yard and all the free time I could spend writing.
It would have been simple to resolve the tax issue when it first arose, but instead, overwhelmed about so much for so long, I had thrown the first letter and all subsequent ones into a large plastic box that stood in the corner of my office. I knew the problem wouldn’t go away and yet I hoped that, magically, it somehow would. I hoped that something might have been misfiled or calculated incorrectly. Surely, a ridiculous error (on their part) would be discovered, and they’d notify me before I had to sort through boxes of returns and supporting documentation.
After the call from the main office, I dug through the mound of unopened mail I’d thrown in the box of “deal with later” and found all the IRS communications including the warning notice advising me that unless I responded my wages would be garnished. There it was, mixed in with everything else. Later had arrived.
I finally told my father about the situation a few months after I’d used up what savings I’d put away in order to bridge the gap between income and expenses. I had meant to get around to fixing things, but just never managed to do it. I assured Dad it was nothing. I’d take care of it quickly. I knew I didn’t owe any taxes—certainly not as much as the IRS claimed—
and vowed to fight any penalties and interest due (exponentially more than the alleged taxes owed since I’d delayed so long). Each month I’d write a check to Dad for rent and then ask him to hold it for a week only to call him within a few days to ask him to hold on to it, with all the others, just a bit longer. This process repeated every month for about ten months.
He’d been inordinately patient about my not paying him. He’d been extraordinarily understanding about all my excuses for why I had not connected with the IRS and straightened it out. When he asked, not in a demanding way, but as though he were just interested, I rationalized. I told him I was so busy at work I couldn’t get off the phone to call or the lines were always busy when I called during breaks, I needed to talk to them by phone, not just send mail back and forth, I just needed to send them copies of the tax returns in question and I was still looking for them. I knew they were in one of the boxes I hadn’t unpacked in five years.
Now, because I had not taken care of or been responsible with my finances, I owed my father thousands of dollars, the last person to whom I ever wanted to owe money. I felt guilty. In addition, I knew my behavior had been inconsiderate and selfish. I was emotionally unequipped to deal with it. I was just done. I had shut down.
I held the phone to my ear as I walked to the reading chair in my home office—what I considered to be the best room I’d ever had in my whole life—and looked out the sliding glass doors and across the new deck into the pine trees where a squirrel ran up and down a branch. I sat down and threw my feet on the foot stool as though ready for a lovely chat, when the real reason was fear that if I did not sit, I would fall.
I imagined my father on the other end of the line. Was he standing up or sitting in his recliner after having thought this through? Despite his age, my father still stood soldier straight and moved, though more slowly than before, with the same grace of an athlete he’d had his whole life. His formerly platinum-blond hair was turning white now. I could envision him impeccably dressed in his golf shirt and khakis, his clear blue eyes intent on his mission of solving the problem I’d created but had not handled. I waited to hear what he had to say.