Long Lost Family

I have been watching a BBC programme (English spelling!) called “Long Lost Family”, and I have been crying alot, watching all the stories about people finding long lost family members; sisters, brothers, children, and parents.

Right now I am feeling super sad about it all, about my dad’s choice to hide his first children, the twins, from everyone except his immediate family, who also chose to hide them. It just feels sad and weird, compounded by how far away we are from our entire family, and that they are probably the reason for that. The information does fill a hole, but maybe the hole is a little bit deeper than I had thought.

I don’t know what to think about this all, today. Sometimes I am so happy about it. I wish so much we could take a train and meet each other and walk around or get dinner or a beer or something. I somehow want to see how tall they are, especially since we match each other in heights – Mark and I at 6 feet and Pat and Carew at 6 foot 4. 14 years and a world apart – and yet, sort of together finally.

I think that lately I have been so mad at a dead person, and also so sad for him and wanting to hug him all at the same time, just to tell him that he didn’t need to do this. I wonder how a parent couldn’t want to see their children and know who they become. The Universe gave me a great gift when I was 34 when I got River as a son after so many years of fraught feelings around having children and being in relationships in general. Cody is my favorite person and I am so lucky to be able to love him and have him in my life, and River is a major bonus, as is his family. I just don’t understand why you would give that up? I am sure that some part of my Dad decided with Carew and I that he wouldn’t give us up, despite being really challenged in the parenting and adulting department.

I don’t know what else to say. It has been grey and rainy here for a couple of days, but I know that spring is around the corner. This winter has been long and full of so much, so many learnings and questions, curiosities. I just can’t get my head around it, this human condition. Sometimes people make these crazy decisions, and what is so crazy is that, in those moments, those are the best decisions of each of these people. They are doing their best, even if their best seems, to us, later, as unnecessary, bad, or hurtful. Blah! I don’t know what to say.

I will say that I am thankful that I have brothers and that knowing them completes a hole in my life that had been there for so long. I didn’t know what or who they were, but I knew that they existed, maybe for my whole life. What a world!

Indirectly

My Dad was an incredible storyteller; when he was dying, nurses at the hospital would ask my brother and I if the stories he had told them earlier were true. One asked, “did he really jump out of planes?”. After he died, we received card after card after card telling stories or sharing condolences about the loss of him, and the loss of his stories.

My brother and I always said that we knew that parts of the stories were true, but we never knew how much, or if some of them were real. Turns out that he spoke around a core truth, a center story, about which we only learned three years after his death.

Before he died, he said to my brother and I a great many things. Just before he went into a coma, in which he laid for 9 days, he told both of us individually that he wasn’t afraid to die and he knew this was the next step in his life, in his journey. This conversation, to both of us, was comforting and I think it was to him, too. He repeatedly told us that we had to take care of our mother.

One of the common themes of his stories was his time in Outward Bound, both teaching in Devon and helping boys of under-resourced backgrounds who had gotten into trouble, known as “Borstal Boys”, and trying to get another school started with little success. We always assumed the school he wanted to start was also in Devon. He spoke about it and told us that it was his biggest regret that he didn’t just try harder, that he was sure that it would have worked eventually, but that he felt that he had to earn more money, and so he eventually abandoned it.

It turns out that there was a story at the core of this story, and probably, at the core of all the others, too. It turns out that he was married in 1966, had two twin boys in 1967, and somehow left that relationship and his sons by 1971. He never told my mom this, or my brother, or I, and his family kept this secret until this last October.

This has been so hard for me to write about, despite peoples’ suggestions that it will help. For some reason, writing about this has been difficult because it scares me. My brother and I found our half-brothers (we think) and last week, sent them handwritten letters asking them to speak with us. They are 58, we are 44, and 40. Writing the letters was hard, and putting them in the mail required a lot of energy and focus, Why? I cannot tell you, although all I know right now is that I feel that knowing this story, and sending the letters, put something in motion that I now can’t take back.

When my Dad got together with their mother he was around 24 years old. I can’t even imagine my Dad as a 24 year old. For some reason, he was always old. Like my brother says, he will be 50 in our minds forever. But he was 24, and then he got married when he was 26, and had two boys when he was 27. Just like my husband Cody did. Just like so many people did. And then 4 years later, he no longer had them, had left them, and had asked his whole family to keep the secret, which they did.

For about a month, I was really mad about this. Sometimes, I still am. Right now, though, I think – why? And I know that there must have been a reason why. Tragical romance? Raising twins as babies gone awry? Lack of involvement in child raising on the part of my dad who was a rig worker and was 6 weeks on, 6 weeks off? Parents didn’t like him? All of the above and so much more?

This is the first time I am writing about this. I keep having emotional outbursts that are inappropriate. I keep thinking about my Dad. I have so much compassion for him now; more so than I ever have. I also want to shake him sometimes and I wish I could talk to him. Somehow I feel that this is the core issue that the whole family rotated around, even though we didn’t know what it was. Years ago, in 2017, I asked my aunts (his sisters) if there had been something that had happened that stopped him from having a close relationship with his family, and especially his mother. They told me it wasn’t their story to tell. Now I understand that, and they were right to tell my mom first. But, I feel somehow ok, good, accepting, forgiving, and curious about how I knew something was off.

For years, my heart has ached at my lack of family. I always wondered why we moved to Texas in 1983, and why we never went back to England. Now I know. I feel like I knew about my brothers even before I knew who they were or what they were to me. It’s as if their absence was a presence in my heart, all along.

I hope to write more about this and explore how it is changing my perspective toward myself and my dad and my place in the world. It is wild. I just turned 44, and I have decided I will live to 88. This means that my life just started its second half; just started over again. Right now I feel so sad sometimes, so angry, so confused; what am I supposed to be doing? Where am I supposed to be? But I suppose Destiny interjected the need for me to know the answer to the big question. The answer is: two brothers, twins, born in January, fellow Capricorns. I hope they want to speak to us.

Cool Breeze, Bright Stars

I was just outside, eating leftovers on my front porch. The house, when it was for sale, advertised said porch as a “farmer’s porch”. I am uncertain what that means. It is stained this bizarre burnt-orange UT color, which contrasts terribly with the sage green of the house. I hope to change it sometime soon. But I really hope to shingle the house soon, so that the color of the farmers porch doesn’t matter as much.

I was just talking to the stars, as I do. I was talking to my friend Mary Ann, too, about how much I miss her and wish I could talk to her. I wish I could talk to her about how weird everything got after she died and what bitches her friends were to me and to a couple of other friends. It was a mass disintegration and reorientation around a small crew of rich bitches. I guess it was inevitable. I asked the stars tonight: did I move to Maine, change my life, sell my house that I loved so much, because I hated my job and my best friend died?

The answer: not exactly. When I left Maine last time, it was like I left my art here. I still did art in Texas, but not to the same caliber or with the same intensity or regularity as I do here. Texas moves so fast and there are no seasons and there are so many highways; it is easy to just go with the flow and not examine yourself all that much. Also, in rapid fire over the course of three years, Cody’s grandma moved in with us, she died, there was a global pandemic, my dad died, and then Mary Ann died. This summer, Kate died and a few months ago, Michelle died and so did Brian. It has been terrible….let me rephrase. It has been bewildering to me. What happened that made Brian and Michelle so sad that they chose to leave us when they had taught me so much over the years? I can see Michelle smiling at me across a table, laughing, tossing her pretty blonde hair, laughing to keep from crying. Brian I can see spinning in a classroom, sharing music and asking us to think more deeply, to see connections. I remember the night he showed us True Stories when I was 15 years old, and didn’t understand it. I didn’t understand alot of what he taught us til I was in college. I have been listening to lots of Stars of the Lid and I feel that lessons are held within those songs, too….lessons to slow down and think. Think, and then do.

So Texas moved too fast, and Maine is so slow. We are changing into the fall and the air tonight is chilly and brisk and beautiful. The stars twinkle; there is a special fall-winter sharpness to the starlight that I love.

I am so thankful to have this time to investigate and think about what is going on with me. I am thankful to be able to ask myself: why am I so sad right now? Today I told my best friend that maybe I can’t be happy anywhere and he laughed and said something about how our dopamine levels are probably off or maybe we were both born in bad moods.

I think my new question is where the sadness is coming from; what is its origin story? Can I find it? I am sure I can. For so long, for years, it was my abortion that happened when I was 15 and the guilt I felt around it. I no longer see it that way; I now know that it was the right decision at the time. My new task is to examine these feelings of now and figure out where they come from. I think they have something to do with my job two years ago at Booker T Washington Elementary and working with two very challenging children. I didn’t know what to do, I am afraid that I hurt them, and I know that they hurt me, physically and mentally. I don’t even know how to describe those experiences yet, but am looking forward to working through some it with my therapist this fall. Cody says it wasn’t my fault and that I did what I was told to do and what I thought I had to do. I remember though, many moments when I just wanted to run away, to hide, to close my eyes and have it be over. Unrealistic.

I wonder what trauma response that experience touched on; it pressed a button to be sure. Lately I have been so interested in epigenetics and how sometimes our responses are not ours, but learned and coded in our genes to predispose us to bad moods, sadness, depression, anxiety, etc. I need to read about it. I am convinced there are generations of sad, scared people inside my soul. I have to tell them that they need to stay in their time period and let me explore mine.

I have been listening to old music, too. I wonder what is happening. What is the journey in my mind? I am hoping to remember to write down as much of it as I can.

My Mother’s House

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My mother’s house has many rooms. One for Want, for Regret, one for Determination and Resignation, one for Hope, one for Money, one for Expectations, Children, one for Past, one for Present, one for Future; all adjoined, all empty.

Perhaps a chair appears in each room from time to time, near the window that shines white light. Looking out the window, again, you see nothing. All empty.

The curtains blow in a breeze that carries with it no scent, no temperature, no hint of its origins.

The chair creaks: does someone sit? Who is it?

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Older women know that life is not what you think it will be: life is a river and we all must just attempt to stay in the boat. Many times, we don’t; we are thrown into muddy waters and just as you look around, desperate for the help that has for years been promised you, you find it gone. Alone in the house.

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All those empty rooms: connected by time and consciousness.

There are tiles on the floor, decorated with twisting vines and flowers, emblems of kitchens, quotes and mottos. When you walk upon them, they begin to crack, to break apart, to tinkle under the feet like the sound of a windowglass shattering or a wine glass landing on the stone floor: broken, under your feet.

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You wander between the rooms for surely there is something in one of them that ties you to the visions that were in the mind all those years ago. You sit on the chair, stand up briefly to stare out the window, look down and even the chair is gone.

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No sounds, just the sound of your breathing. No one there to hold your hand. How would you hold one now, anyway? Time has passed and the muscle memory is gone. You can’t see the outside of the house: barricaded and entombed by walls as high as mountains. Looking out the window, you can’t see them. Within that empty light, you can’t remember that you built them yourself.

There are no doors.

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