When
I was a little kid, my dad ate Wasa every morning for breakfast.
I'd
sit, with my fruity loops or charms of luck, sugary sweet in my bowl,
milk turning a sickly pink, kicking my legs back and forth, as they
wouldn't touch the ground for several years. I'd watch him eat Wasa
and wonder, how anyone could eat such a dry looking, tasteless
cracker, and nothing else, every morning. Well, Wasa and the foul
smelling dark, bitter liquid known as coffee. What sort of strange
mind-control could possibly posses someone to choose a stiff sheet of
crusted bread over sweet marsh-mellows and rainbow colors, to choose
the taste of burning beans over the smooth and chocolaty goodness of
flavored milk?. My breakfast smiled at me with big joyful eyes from
a box every morning, but his hid behind brown paper packaging and
four lonely letters, Double Ew, Ayyy, Ess, Ayyy.
What
was clear to me was that adulthood was the process of finding boring
things, interesting. It meant choosing a monotonous drone about the
weather over a colorful cartoon about medieval monsters living in New
York City. Taking a walk around the neighborhood instead of climbing
rocks and digging up salamanders in the backyard. Spending a
Saturday afternoon snoozing instead of adventuring in made up
castles, battlefields and space ships. Going to the beach, but never
going into the water.
I knew it wasn't that adults liked boring things. I understood there was something I just couldn't see. Why did the man who listed numbers on the TV hold such rapt attention of the tall people around me?
So when my dad came home at night and turned on the business news, I joined him. He asked if I liked the show and I said I did. I did. The stream of up and down arrows, numbers and figures nearly put me to sleep, and the fat man talking reminded me of a stinky uncle, but I liked watching the business news. I pretended to be an adult, with my dad. We were being adults together.
When I turned 6 and a half, (a tough part of becoming an adult means forgetting the importance of half birthdays. At that time, I had not yet forgotten.), two things happened. Celebrating by now very advanced age, I resolved to try Wasa. It was crunchy cardboard. In spite of the smile I put on in attempt to mirror my dad's face, I never tried it with him again. Clearly, adulthood was still a far off dream.
The second thing that happened was an announcement from my parents. I was a big sister. My baby brother or sister would come a month after I turned 7, so we could think of the baby as my birthday present. That's what they said to me, anyway.
I knew it wasn't that adults liked boring things. I understood there was something I just couldn't see. Why did the man who listed numbers on the TV hold such rapt attention of the tall people around me?
So when my dad came home at night and turned on the business news, I joined him. He asked if I liked the show and I said I did. I did. The stream of up and down arrows, numbers and figures nearly put me to sleep, and the fat man talking reminded me of a stinky uncle, but I liked watching the business news. I pretended to be an adult, with my dad. We were being adults together.
When I turned 6 and a half, (a tough part of becoming an adult means forgetting the importance of half birthdays. At that time, I had not yet forgotten.), two things happened. Celebrating by now very advanced age, I resolved to try Wasa. It was crunchy cardboard. In spite of the smile I put on in attempt to mirror my dad's face, I never tried it with him again. Clearly, adulthood was still a far off dream.
The second thing that happened was an announcement from my parents. I was a big sister. My baby brother or sister would come a month after I turned 7, so we could think of the baby as my birthday present. That's what they said to me, anyway.
We
all changed with that announcement. My father gave the unborn baby a
name; Philip, a male name. That was when I found out he had done the
same with me. I was to be Joseph, after him. Sadly, his
namesake-to-be didn't turn out the way he had planned as a girl, but
now was a new chance for a real boy.
"How is my son?" he would ask my mother, in spite of her protests that it could just as easily be his daughter she carried.
"How is my son?" he would ask my mother, in spite of her protests that it could just as easily be his daughter she carried.
"SHE,
is doing fine," she'd say and they'd both have a laugh.
"Why do you want a boy?" I asked my father. "Don't you like girls?"
"Why do you want a boy?" I asked my father. "Don't you like girls?"
"Of
course, I love you," he replied, unhesitatingly, "But there
are some things I can do with you, and some things I can do with a
boy."
"Like
what?"
He smiled, perhaps not realizing the sense of insecurity I suddenly had, "When I was a boy, I would go fishing with my father. We'd build treehouses and he taught me chess."
He smiled, perhaps not realizing the sense of insecurity I suddenly had, "When I was a boy, I would go fishing with my father. We'd build treehouses and he taught me chess."
"I
want to play chess too!" I shouted.
"Helen,
you never had any interest in chess. Remember when I tried to teach
you checkers? You wouldn’t stop fidgeting. Chess is a lot harder.
You need to concentrate."
"Can
a boy concentrate better than a girl?" I asked.
"That's
not what I meant." End of conversation.
By
chance, dad had been right and the baby was a boy. He was a chubby
baby that looked to me like a sack of potatoes. His arms didn't work
right and he couldn't even walk. Not like me, I thought. I could
walk, talk and not poop my pants. I knew the whole alphabet and
could read up to Level 2 books! Philip couldn't do any of those
things, but my father disappeared to his side, nonetheless.
Dad still ate Wasa but we didn't watch business news together anymore. He spent that time with the baby. Maybe this was another level of adulthood, I thought. Not only could they find boring things interesting, they found fussy, stinky babies charming. Being an adult must really mess up your head, I concluded.
Dad still ate Wasa but we didn't watch business news together anymore. He spent that time with the baby. Maybe this was another level of adulthood, I thought. Not only could they find boring things interesting, they found fussy, stinky babies charming. Being an adult must really mess up your head, I concluded.
Philip
learned chess, eventually. He also built a treehouse with dad, and
they went fishing. I wanted to go fishing too, but I never asked.
When he got older, dad sent him to some “Young Programers” camp,
a hundred miles away or so. The Bay Area wasn't what it was like
back then. The Silicon Valley of my childhood is a memory when the
internet was still nascent but bathed in an era of the revolutionary
optimism; of dot-coms and start ups. But some people remembered the
area when the idea of a “computer on a chip” was revolutionary,
including my father. Dad knew saw how much the area was changing the
world, and he wanted his son to be a part of it.
Philip was 9 the first time. He returned with a hero's welcome from both of my parents. Somewhere along the line dad had sold to mom the idea of a future that included a wildly successful child who would shape the future world. At 16, I never made the mistake of thinking they talked about me.
Philip was 9 the first time. He returned with a hero's welcome from both of my parents. Somewhere along the line dad had sold to mom the idea of a future that included a wildly successful child who would shape the future world. At 16, I never made the mistake of thinking they talked about me.
But
Philip had a different opinion. Next summer, as dad was preparing
the car I caught my brother in his room, alone and face down on the
bed. It looked like he was whimpering, but when he turned around to
my touch I couldn't see tears.
“I
hate camp.” Philip admitted to me. “They make you sit in a
classroom for 6 hours a day. All my friends from school are going
hiking or playing baseball. I don't want to go back. Can you tell
them something? I'm sick. Something. Or break my leg?”
“Then
you'd be going to camp in a cast,” I joked mirthlessly. Philip
scowled.
“Phil
gets really homesick when he goes to camp.” I lied to mom.
“Oh
that's so sweet. Your brother really loves his family. Joe, did you
hear that?” My dad had just entered the kitchen where my mom was
packing lunches.
“What's
that?” my dad responded.
“Phil
really misses us when he goes off to camp.”
“Maybe
this year he shouldn't go,” I offered, calling upon my couple of
summers' experience as a lifeguard to inject the maximum amount of
authority allowed in a 17 year old's voice.
I
had not even finished speaking when dad responded to mom. “What a
great kid. There's nothing more important than loyalty to your
family.”
It
was time to go and Philip flashed me a betrayed look. I gave him a
sympathetic shrug that got forgotten as my mother started on about
how they'd send him care packages every week.
I
went off to college the following year. Needing space, I had only
applied to out-of-state colleges, which was something that would pain
my wallet years later. But at that time, going to Colorado State was
one of the best decisions of my life. I joined the Rams Cycling Team
and I made some amazing friends I still keep to this day.
But the most important thing I gained at CSU was a sense of confidence. I quickly fell in love with my biology classes. Truly, the boring had become interesting to me and I knew I was arriving at adulthood. Charts and scans held my undivided attention. Sitting still for hours going over slides and cultures were exhilarating. Coffee started to taste good as it kept me up long nights in the lab. Wasa, an easy way to get breakfast on little time, became delicious. I might have put jelly or cheese on it from time to time.
So started my career in medicine and neuroscience.
But the most important thing I gained at CSU was a sense of confidence. I quickly fell in love with my biology classes. Truly, the boring had become interesting to me and I knew I was arriving at adulthood. Charts and scans held my undivided attention. Sitting still for hours going over slides and cultures were exhilarating. Coffee started to taste good as it kept me up long nights in the lab. Wasa, an easy way to get breakfast on little time, became delicious. I might have put jelly or cheese on it from time to time.
So started my career in medicine and neuroscience.
Philip
kept going to camp though. Later, a 4 year stint at UC Berkeley gave
my parents what they had always wanted: their son in computer
science.
I
stayed in Colorado, did a residency but ended up back at the
university as a full time researcher, studying memory, but I visited
California often. Christmas dinners were full of conversations from
the political to the philosophical, but nothing held the attention of
my parents so much as Philip's technological mumbo-jumbo. I say that
affectionately. I'm sure I'd lose him just as easily if I had
brought up medical mumbo-jumbo.
Three
years ago was the last Christmas with my parents. Philip had been in
mid-conversation about his work in semi-conductors when he casually
mentioned that Melinda had been berating him for coming home so late
in the past few months. Luckily, my sister-in-law was not present.
“What
an ungrateful woman!” My mother shouted, “She doesn't know how
lucky she is to have such a high earning, high achieving husband like
you. You should divorce her!”
Phil
and I were shocked. The fact that my father was not, concerned me.
He had gotten up and gently patted her on the back soothingly.
“It's
alright, dear. They are fine. Don't worry about it.” Within
minutes my mother had calmed back down to her usual cheery self.
I
waited until my brother had left before cornered my father.
“How
long has this been going on for?”
“What?”
he mumbled, pretending to no know what I was talking about.
“Mom.
How long has she been having outbursts?”
“Give
your mother a break Helen. She's been having a lot of stress lately
with your grandmother in hospice now. She didn't mean anything by
it.”
“That's
not what I mean, Dad. This could be serious.”
“She
got really angry the first time three months ago or so.” he finally
conceded, “Which, I will remind you, is when your grandpop died and
grandma entered the nursing home. She's just stressed. That's all.”
“Please.
Get her to see a neurologist. At least.” I didn't want to voice
my biggest concern, but the words brain cancer stuck to the roof of
my mouth.
“You
worry too much. Don't be over dramatic.”
“Dad,
please.” I pleaded. Visions of my mother spiraling down into
mental infancy flooded my mind. I tried to put myself as if I were
in front of any patient or research subject and make my next words as
clinical as possible. “This is my professional opinion.”
I knew before the end of the sentence I had failed. In the atmosphere around my father, my every word transformed into that of a whiny 12 year old.
I knew before the end of the sentence I had failed. In the atmosphere around my father, my every word transformed into that of a whiny 12 year old.
“I'll
take her tomorrow.” I offered.
“You
won't. Your flight.” he replied firmly.
“I'll
change it. This is important.”
For
all his failings, my dad was a fairly calm man. I can only recall
him yelling at me once, courtesy of my poor decision to sneak away in
the family car to visit a boyfriend as a teen. I was instantly
transported back in time to that Christmas. His voice rose in
crescendo.
“You
will not. You are making a big deal out of nothing. The only thing
you will do is stress your mother out even more. We are not speaking
about this anymore.”
Five
months later I got a call. Not from my father. From Philip.
“Mom
got diagnosed with cancer today.” he informed me. “It's too late
to treat.”
“How
much time does she have left?” I asked, not sure which was
stronger, a life-time of indignation, or the sadness of the impending
loss of a parent. My concern for my mother won out. I didn't have a
useful target for the indignation anyway.
“Doctor
said a couple of weeks, at most. You should get over here soon.”
“What
about dad?”
“He's
in total shock. This has been a real surprise for all of us.”
My
thirst for indignation made a stunning comeback. “He didn't tell
you what I told him.” It was a statement, not a question.
“What?”
“I'm
done, Phil. Sorry.”
Within
the week I had made arrangements to see my mother, one last time, but
I told no-one except my husband. She was unconscious and the doctors
told me she probably wasn't waking up again. I held her hand and
said my goodbyes mentally. I said them to her. I said them to
Philip. But to my father, I said nothing. His goodbye had already
been said to me, long, long ago, about the time a little girl tried
to eat Wasa and like it.