Audience: Lives
It was Tuesday. Six chairs and four people sat at the kitchen table. It had been a month since my return from Scotland, and the family dinners that I had missed so much when I was away had become normal once again. Now I longed for the North Sea.
Two empty place-mats decorated the table space in front of Elizabeth’s and Margaret’s empty chairs. Elizabeth was probably at the Alma College library scrawling scientific jargon in her lab notebook. Margaret..well, wherever she was, she was with Kyle. After dating for two years, Margaret and Kyle had become a sickening twosome attached at the hip, complete with gag-inspiring pet names.
Their relationship was constant dinner conversation which my father used as an outlet for his built up resentment of Kyle, resentment that my sister wouldn’t understand.
“I already have four kids, and now I’m paying for another one,” my dad rants. “I would never help myself to food at your mother’s house when I was his age. He eats everything!”
I swish some straggling peas across my plate, making circles with my spoon around pieces of cut off fat. It gives the steak flavor, according to my dad.
“I know but he’s good to Margaret,” my mom interjects, always the peacemaker at a table that has seen its fair share of battles.
A breathy “Hmmph” from my dad concludes the rant as he pulls his chair from the table and sulks back to his office, finding some sort of solace in his black leather armchair and finance shows.
Mary sneaks out after him to avoid the after-dinner clean-up.
Suzanne, I don’t have time to help I have too much homework.
Sorry that I actually go to school and have tennis.
It’s not like you’re busy.
At 15, “little Mary” has her moments of being a huge bitch, but being the youngest she knows she can get away with it.
Left alone in the kitchen, I tackle the dishes and complain about my boss as my mom handles the leftovers that will be my Dad’s lunch tomorrow.
“Joe wasn’t even in the office when I got there today. I had to wait for 30 minutes before he even showed up.”
No response.
“And then I had to call every golf league member about the price change because he forgot to include it in the bulletin.”
No response.
Sometimes my mom became so internally preoccupied that she tuned everyone and everything out. So I continued to rinse away dinner scraps, scrubbing the stubborn food chunks with a soapy sponge before placing them in the dishwasher.
“If I get sick I want you to put me in a home.”
I turn off the water and turn around to look at my mother covering the spinach casserole with pink plastic.
“What are you even talking about?”
“If I get sick I want to be put in a home. You can find a nice place and visit me. I don’t to be taken care of.”
“That’s a little dark and premature mom, don’t you think?”
She let out a breathy sigh, shrugged her shoulders, and placed the leftovers in the fridge.
My grandfather died when I was 10 after losing his humanity to Alzheimer's. Reduced to an infant, a 6’3’’ man in diapers, he could no longer walk, or speak, or remember us.
Is this what she thinks will happen to her?
My grandmother took care of him at home; my mom and her siblings alternated weekends to drive up to help, until every other weekend became every weekend. Eventually a hospice worker came to the house, but there were always family members around -- taking him to the bathroom, changing him, feeding him, talking to him.
This went on for five years. I was too young to be sad about a man I had never known when he was healthy, a man that would never know me. But not my Mom.
Yeah, she forgets where she puts her keys, but doesn’t everyone sometimes?
She always asks us to leave her reminder post-its, but she just has a lot going on.
She works too much.
Yeah, she works too much.
I stood in the kitchen, my hands wrinkled and wet from the soapy suds, and as hard as I tried not to think about it, all I could imagine was my mother, sitting in my grandfather’s chair, staring at me blankly.
Put me in a home.
At 21, the idea of my parents in a home is not something I had ever really thought about. In their early 50’s, both my parents are healthy; my dad runs 30 miles a week and my mom walks and eats right. Physically, my parents don’t seem old. But maybe it’s not just the physical that I need to worry about.
In the morning, her heels click and clack all the way down the stairs. Her Flowerbomb perfume left a trail of scent behind her, mixing with the columbian blend that hung in the air from my coffee. She rummages through her purse, pulling up zippered pockets and emptying its contents on to the table. Her eyes dart from the table to the shelf and back again. Staring at the lipstick, hand sanitizer, chapstick and a collage of receipts sprawled across the kitchen table makes me angry.
“Oh my god mom you put your keys on the counter.”
I’m harsh and instantly regret it.
But she just smiles. “Have a good day.”
Keys in hand she clicks away in her heels out the door. The garage door rumbles as it opens, and again as it shuts a few moments later.
She just has a lot going on.
She works too much.
Yeah, she works too much.