“The Most Interesting Things Are……

…… Invisible.”

“The most interesting things are invisible.” – Samantha Sotto Yambao, Water Moon.

     Somewhat recently I finished Water Moon. This fantasy fiction novel was as visually colorful and eclectic and passionately romantic as it was strange and scattered. I enjoyed it; it was okay; I gave it 3.5 stars. What has been surprising however, is this one particular sentence from the book that continues to revisit my thoughts bringing back memories from childhood as well as connecting me to experiences I am living through right now.  When I first read the sentence I immediately thought about my dad. Since I was his sidekick for most things as a kid, tween and teen it was not uncommon to enter a room with him and hear friends, patients, students, and relatives of my father’s say things like,

“Bumi nice job on …..” 

“Doc, you saved my day when you…..”

“Dr. Kniaz thank you so much for…..”

      I remember being so shocked when I would hear some of these comments and gratitudes because he rarely or never told me about the things he did during the day, and once when I asked him why I did not know about these things he simply stated,

“I just do it, Jess; no need to talk about it.” Many nights he would come home from work with baked treats and little gifts and when I asked why people gave him these things he said because it is their way of saying thank you; which of course then prompted me to ask,

“Thank you for what?” and he would just wave his hand gently in the air as if waving a bug away and say, 

“Feh.”

     Invisibility and humility. 

      As a young kid falling asleep for me was like a limber, rehearsed gymnast glued to a bench – Gaah!! Nope. Nada. Forget it! E.T., Freddy, Gremlins, Ghosts, Showtime, HBO, Cinemax, and no parent controls INCLUDING an openly On The Market, dating single father –  are you KIDDING ME??!!!

My dad looked very much like, but was a kinder, more tender, responsible, and less cheaty version of Don Draper… He did like his cocktails, might have thrown his garbage out of the car window in 1962, he was charming as hell, brilliant as all get out, and left me alone a lot with the remote. Now as for me, I was a kinder, more tender, responsible, and less bitchy, although extremely exhausting, version of Sally Draper. I got the remote with no parental controls, made empty promises of goodness and Don/dad got outta the house. He always came back before midnight and I somehow always remembered to turn the channel back to Public Television before pressing the power button.

Intermittent Invisible paternity, I can not watch scary movies to this day, but these were some of my favorite nights. 

     Finally and ohhhhh soooooo long ago, when our three kids were small and bedtime would finally arrive, my husband and I would crawl our sleep deprived bodies and brains up the stairs to baths, toothbrushes, and pajamas; good night Percy, goodnight mice and mittens and moons, good night caterpillar, and to the couch we would desperately plop intertwining feet, calves and blankets until drool would hit the floor and/or the top of our dog’s head. After some good ol’ couch sleep we would battle the ether of fatigue and always check on the kids in their beds before collapsing into our own. During one particular evening and bunk check we discovered two sleeping heads instead of three. We checked under covers, in corners, in closets, and began ticking off the checklist of potential hiding spots until I made it to the third basement step when I saw a gentle bounce of light on the wall from a headlamp wrapped around a teeny tiny six year old head. My initial instinct and exhausted impulse was to yell STOP and scoop our youngest kid into my arms and tuck him back into a duck-taped comforter – but I didn’t. I couldn’t do anything but watch what was unfolding in front of me in the shadowy, dimly lit darkness. On a table, like a sea with a sliver of silver moonlight, were all the innards of one of those spinner toys that were either the nightmare or miracle for every kindergarten teacher across America! Hovering above this dismantled, scattered spinner explosion was my son’s head diligently focused on correct lighting and the tip of his tongue was dangling out of the left corner of his mouth like Calvin when he and Hobbs were in cahoots planning world domination; pure concentration. 

     I watched in silence as each silver piece by silver piece found its way, with the help of a dancing, bobbing spotlight, back into its rotating trifecta. I gave my husband the sign that all was okay and tiptoed back upstairs and pretended to be asleep as we waited for our engineer to hit the hay.

Child under the guise of Invisibility; spinner survived.

     Last week we dropped our youngest and last kid off at college. Last night before I went to bed I wanted to text him. 

But I didn’t.

This morning when I woke up I wanted to call him and see if he was safe, happy, lonely, did he meet anyone new, when was the last time he ate, is his room too hot, should I get Life360? 

But I didn’t.

Did our middle child get fire extinguishers for his slanted, hillside embedded, vertigo inducing, charming (fine –  I’ll throw a charming in there!) new house?!! 

Where is our oldest and firstborn?!! Oh right, she is local and in town until next week and actually downstairs at the moment – jeez.

Do they know I love them if I am not unrolling balled up socks tucked deeply into cushion crevices? 

Invisible.

     Things are going to happen, things should happen when we are not there. That is when life happens. 

     What I can not see, what I can not hear, what I can not touch or talk to is maybe just not always my business.

     Soon, when I turn out the lights before going to bed, I will walk into three empty bedrooms but I will trust, and I will know that what I can not see is many times the most hilarious, naughty,  beautiful, and interesting.

So Sorry, What Was That?

Okay so let’s paint the scene….1980 something – suburban faux Frank Lloyd Wright wanting to be a bungalow wanting to be contemporary was spruced up and ready for a wedding!! Dad, 60, married  woman, 30, and 12 year old slowly inched her way down steps holding a delicate bouquet of peach roses. Between steps tween looked around the room at shocked, numb, bored, relieved and maybe some happy guests all the while thinking, ‘Okay, cool,cool,cool,cool,cool, this will be fine.

Kind of like, and VERY unlike a Jewish wedding, instead of swirling around the bride and groom asking when the baby will be coming people started whispering at me, around me, literally over me, ”Soooooo do YOU think she should call (insert bride’s name here) mom?” “Maybe it would be best if you called her mom.” “I bet she’d like it if you called her mom.” “You will feel better and miss your mom less if you call her mom.” “When will you decide if you will call her mom?” 

You get the picture. 

It lasted a while. 

 The thought and idea went in and out of my head and heart like a tornado. Sometimes I wanted to run in the house after school and yell from the rooftops, ‘MOMMMMMM I’m home! Please make me strawberry covered cupcakes and then we can laugh about love and boys and have a pillow fight.’ Sometimes I came home and ran to my room and hid in my closet wondering if when I opened my closet door the idea would disappear, and I’d be in Narnia eating Turkish Delights riding atop Aslan in a cape – FAR away from Wisconsin.  My relationship with this woman and this nuptial was complicated; sometimes I thought she wanted to eat me or lose me in a grocery store and sometimes I thought she wanted to hairspray my bangs and gently put her fingers through the Finesse and say, “Jess, let’s go shopping.”

I did want my pain to go away; I did want to start over; I did want a mom. 

So I did it. 

I came home from school one day, turned a two minute walk up my driveway into a thirty minute unnecessary nature hike, opened the door and proclaimed, “I am home, MOM.”

Crickets. Not the bugs.

I turned on my heels, ran back down the driveway and decided to try again. But you can’t go backwards. On so many levels in life we simply can not go backwards.

  I recently rewatched an episode from Everybody Loves Raymond called Call Me Mom. Anybody who knows me knows I am, for whatever reason and many,  obsessed with this show. I have probably seen this episode a hundred times; alas, this particular episode resonated with me as if I saw it for the first time. 

     For review, Deborah wants Ray to call her mom, Lois, ‘mom’ so he “throws her a bone” and gives it a shot. Marie, Ray’s mom, overhears Ray calling Lois ‘mom’ so of course, in her passive aggressive Magnum Opus lets Ray know this is unsatisfactory. Ray stops calling Lois ‘mom’ and Deborah gets upset. Then Ray takes reverse psychology to a higher level and suggests that if Deborah calls Marie ‘mom’ everyone will live in peace and harmony and bond in family bliss. Deborah gathers her courage and walks across the street to make her move and Marie responds to Deborah’s plight with a shocked and confused, “So sorry, what was that?” Followed by a chilling, “Oh, you don’t have to do that dear.” 

YIKES

I empathize.

     What was complicated for me was surely complicated for (insert name of new step-mom here).  I understand that now; I did not understand that back then. What I also could not understand was how I let so many people influence my words and actions when our moment and our life was no one else’s business. My gut had said no, not the right time; my tongue was on a mission to help others feel better about me being in a complicated situation.  

     The New Year is upon us. This time of year makes many of us want to do better, make changes, erase wrongs and rewrite the rights. New Year’s Eve sidles up right next to a day that shares my mother’s yahrzeit and our wedding anniversary.  Almost 22 years ago my cowboy and I decided to marry on a day that held a lot. We can never go backwards, though we can add on, move ahead and build new dreams while at the same time remembering and moving on from despair. 

     Drown out the whispering and make your own win! It’s nobody’s business!

Happy New Year xo


Thank you to my editor, Leila Loeb.

(Insert editor’s name) can definitely call me MOM!