Long ago and far away, I owned a house on a huge, double lot. And on
this lot, there were some trees. Pine trees and silver maples. Green
shrubs hugged the base of the house. Alongside our house was an entire
lot, big enough for another house but it had only grass and a couple
mature maple trees, plus a row a tall shrubs acting to block the noise
from the street alongside that lot. The maples were mature and
majestic, with spectacular fall color shows. Silver maples, however,
have a shallow root system, making it difficult to grow the kind of
suburban lawn that most people aspire to. Plus, the shallow root systems
make it hard to mow your crappy lawn. The roots jam your mower. Our
trees provided deep shade, which added another challenge to my
then-husband's fantasy of thick, lush, green sod. I loved the silver
maples but, also, I hated them because I had to listen to the
he-who-shall-not-be-named whined about the grass. I will never write his
name but I'd like my readers to know that if I had to give him a name,
it would be mathafucka.
The root system of our silver
maple trees came above the ground, making it impossible to grow the kind
of fantasy all-American lawn most Americans want. Or used to want. My
ex husband wanted one.The motherfucker. The word rolls happily off my
tongue when used to refer to him but I won't use it again, having now
provided a sketch of his values and personality.
There were no catalpa trees on our land.
My neighbor across the street, however, also had a huge, double lot. Her double lot was covered with catalpa trees.
Did
I mention that although he-who-shall-not-be-named complained constantly
about the lawn that he never did any yard work? He worked sixty hours a
week in his big-shot job. When I was lucky, he worked more than that.
He watched sports when he was home, expected his meals on the table,
his laundry done. And, the jerk, he'd patrol the house, inspecting it to
see if I had cleaned properly. He mostly came home to eat, sleep and
dominate abusively. The yard work, in our little family, was woman's
work. My work.
The lawn mower terrified my baby, then
my toddler. First, I had tried to mow the lawn while she was napping,
fretting that she might wake up and need me but I would not hear her
over the mower. This meant that I mowed the lawn in little bitty
snatches of time. So I was eternally mowing the goddamn lawn. This meant
the lawn was never all mowed at the same time. This gave my
then-husband something else to berate me for. He said I should just let
the baby cry as long as it took me to mow the lawn in a manner he
considered proper. It was proper to mow the whole lawn all at once. The
extra lot was all lawn and the main lawn had hard to mow grass, mired
amidst the tree roots that came up to the surface for water. I could not
work outside for two hours, unable to hear my baby crying inside the
house while I was out with the roaring lawn mower.
The
lawnmower was much more powerful than we needed. I had wanted a push
mower. He acted like the lawnmower reflected his manhood and had bought
one, over my objections, that was particularly loud. Very manly. As I
have said, I did all the mowing.
Mowing the lawn was a
pain in the neck with a baby but raking leaves with a baby was fun.
Before she could walk, I would just prop my Rosie near me and chatter to
her nonstop. I really liked to talk to her about the wind.
"Let's be quiet, honey," I often said to her, "Let's just be as still as we can and think about what we feel."
Then
I would pause to listen expressively, the expression being for her
benefit. "Did you feel that?" I would exclaim, "Did you feel that
movement on your cheek? Did you feel your hair move? I saw your hair
move. I felt my hair move."
I paused a lot, to give her
a chance to think about what I was saying, to think about the air. "You
feel the air moving, honey," I would say. "Isn't that amazing? You can
feel it but you can't see it. Oh, Rosie," I would conclude, "Life is
full of things you can feel but you cannot see."
"When you feel your hair moving, that is the wind, honey. Can you say wind?"
It
never mattered to me that my daughter could not talk back. I talked on
and on. I felt compelled to talk to her about everything. I believed I
was imparting meaningful things to her with my nonstop chatter. Even
when she did not understand what I said, she felt what I felt. She felt
my love for her, my attention. And she did communicate back, just not in
language, not at first.
"Look at the tree, see how the branches and leaves move? That's the wind, honey, moving our trees."
"See the leaves blowing away? What is making them move?"
We
had great conversations while I raked leaves. We had great
conversations while we did everything. I was scintilating. She was
mesmerized.
Left to my own choices, I would not have
raked any leaves, and especially not the catalpa leaves. The lawn was a
wipe out anyway, because of our shallow tree roots. I wanted to let the
leaves stay on the lawn. I did not care about the grass, although I was
very invested in my vegetables and flowers. My husband, he who I shall
not name but I will use an accurate adjective to refer to him: my
motherfucker of a husband insisted I rake all the leaves, even the
catalpas that blew from across the street. They were not even our
leaves. The catalpa leaves were so thick that they might have wiped out
what little grass we had between our shallow, on-the-surface, tree
roots.Easy for motherfucker to insist I rake them; he did no yard work
at all.
My life raking catalpa leaves was short-lived. As soon as my ex and I separated, I never raked leaves again in that house.
While
I still raked, just for two falls, I put Rosie in a lavendar sweater
outfit, pants and matching top with a hood. The hood had a white ball on
a string, attached near the crown of her head. That fluffy white fabric
ball would bounce around her head and I loved the intensely gorgeous
perfection of the contrsaat of the white bobbing ball, her rosy cheeks
and her dark brown eyes, with the lavendar hood. An exquisitely
beautiful visage. Her pink to red cheeks beamed out of the hood,
mittened hands waving. She seemed intently focused on me, still the
center of her existence at that time. Remembering her on those chilled
fall days, her rosy cheeks, her big brown eyes following me, evokes one
of my sweetnest memories of being with her.
We loved to
rake the maple leaves, which are easy to gather into large piles. We
loved to tumble in them. My job was to gather all the leaves into piles
on our driveway and then my husband would help me bag them. It is much
easier to bag leaves with two people. It was a challenge to get those
piles because Rosie loved to mess them up. We loved fall. We loved all
the time we spent together. Or so I thought.
Just about the time Rosie and I finished raking our maple leaves, the catalpa leaves would begin to fall.
Catalpa
leaves are gigantic, often twelve inches or more at their widest tips.
And catalpa leaves are thick. Catalpa leaves are a misery to rake. They
stick to the rake. I would make just one small swath with my rake, the
rake would be full and if I wanted to continue raking, I would have to
stop, after just one swipe with the rake, two swipes tops, and then have
to pull the leaves off the rake before I could rake more. I had to tear
off the leaves, put them in a pile or in a bag, and swipe again. Again
and again. It was tedious, hard work. And exhausting. Imagine trying to
gather dozens of cubic yards of anything but only able to gather a few
cubic inches at a time.
Nowadays, a person might use a leaf blower. Not back then.
When
I raked the catalpa leaves, I vented my frustration to my daughter, who
was the best listener I ever knew before she learned to speak. After
she learned to speak, she still liked to listen to me. Until she became a
teenager.
"I remember reading about Nancy Drew's yard
having catalpa leaves," I told Rosie, "When Nancy Drew had catalpa
leaves, they sounded beautiful. I read about them and longed to see
catalpa trees. When I was a little girl, I used to wish our house in
Chicago had catalpa leaves just like Nancy Drew. But oh, no, my dear
little girl, I was wrong. Nancy Drew was wrong to love her catalpa
trees. Catalpa trees are one of god's curses, my honey bunny. Don't ever
saddle yourself with catalpa leaves. You've been warned." Even now, it
gives me great amusement to remember the one-sided, brilliant arguments
I presented to my one and two-year-old. I was always giving valuable
life lessons like the catalpa leaves lessons.
Of course
I didn't really think I was giving her meaningful lessons in my words. I
did believe, fervently, that I was giving her lessons with my constant
attempts to expand her world, open her up to consider things like the
invisible wind and, most importantly, the lesson that I loved her and
liked her enough to focus on her.
One nice thing about
talking incessantly to an infant is that it is not necessary to stop and
explain things like who is Nancy Drew unless you feel like it. Rosie
was always willing to listen to whatever I had to say. She trusted me,
at this stage in life, on all things. She didn't need to know that Nancy
Drew was a teenage sleuth in a series of mysteries targeted to young,
female readers. What could she do but trust me, as she sat in her walker
under one of our old maple trees and I raked leaves, talking almost
nonstop.
"Catalpa leaves are horrible," I often
complained. "And do you know what is the worst?" Rosie always wanted to
know the worst. She signaled this longing to me telepathically. "The
worst is that all these goddamn leaves are not even ours, honey. These
leaves belong to the neighbors. Every year these leaves blow across the
street, into our yard. By every right, the neighbors should come over
here and rake them. But no, oh no, they do not. They shirk their duty,
my little one. Don't ever shirk your duty, my little Rosie. Well, don't
ever own catalpa trees but if you should ever be so foolish, well, then
be a good neighbor and gather your own goddamn leaves, wherever they may
blow. Just ask your neighbors where you need to rake. I am sure they
will happily accept your raking help."
Sometimes, when
making indignant speeches about those cursed catalpa leaves and the
negligent neighbors who did not help me, I spoke as loudly as I could,
as if the neighbor would hear me and come over and help. It was fall.
Windows not open. Plus that neighbor had a full time job and I usually
raked her catalpa leaves while she was at work, while the whole
neighborhood seemed empty except for me and my kitty kat, my cocoa bear,
my cake cup. My Rose.
It was not necessary to explain
things like 'shirk your duty' to Rosie. I knew that if I spoke to her
intelligently, she would catch up. And she did. She had near-perfect
scores in English on her SATs.
I made a decision as
soon as Rosie was born that I was going to talk to her exactly like I
talked to everyone else. So I said 'goddamn' to her. I also said things
like bullshit, fuck, and damn, except never in front of her dad because
he would have been furious. We left him when Rosie was a baby but we
stayed in the house a few years. Once he moved out, I stopped raking
leaves. Rosie still helped me grow flowers and vegetables, of course.
Pat
Clark was the name of our neighbor who owned the cursed catalpas.
Sometimes, Pat would sometimes stroll across the street while I was
raking her catalpa leaves to say hello. Pat was a very tall woman and
she had a way of looking regal, whatever she did. She would cross her
arms, settle back on her feet and say from on high "It just isn't fair
that you have to rake all these leaves. They come from my yard, after
all."
"Well, Pat," I would say, "You are welcome, feel
perfectly free, to rake these leaves. Here, you can use my rake. Rosie
and I will sit and watch. I could use a break. Rake as much as you
want!"
Pat would laugh, shift on her feet again and stroll back home.
"Did
you hear that?" I would exclaim to my Rosie, "Even she knows it isn't
fair that your poor mother has to rake these cursed leaves! Don't ever
own catalpas, my little pretty." I so appreciated Rosie's unspoken but
passionate support for the injustice of those catalpa leaves.
Catalpa
leaves will choke a lawn. If you care about lawns, which I do not and
did not. You have to get them up if you want any grass.
I hated catalpa leaves.
Now
I can find lots of catalpa trees in Northern California. They are
beautiful trees with lovely flowers in the spring. Great shade trees.
Nancy Drew was right. Nancy had spoken of their great shade. As I walk
around, I crunch on the leathery, thick, cursed things. Since I don't
have to rake them, they are beautiful to me once more. As I crunch
along, I have mental conversations with my baby Rosie, telling her that
it is okay to enjoy catalpa leaves now that her mother does not have to
rake them. I remember the many, perfect shades of rosy her cheeks
usually looked when we did yard work. I remember that her cheeks grew
red when she helped me shovel snow. I remember the spring I planted
dozens of zinnias. When I weeded my zinnias, two-year-old Rosie would
help me but two-year-old Rosie could not distinguish the weeds from the
zinnias. She followed me as I moved along my zinnia border, and she
pulled up all my zinnias. She was so proud to help. When she was asleep,
I went out and planted new plants. I never told anyone before this
that I replanted flowers after my dumpling dolly helped me by pulling
out all my starter flower plants.
Sitting on the ground
with her, talking about the beauty of flowers, nattering on about the
miracle of growing things, how we could put seeds in the ground, water
them and the sun and other forces would cause the seeds to grow. More
things she could not see but which were real, for she could not see
whatever force made a flower grow, she could only see the growing. I
spoke of these things hoping to get her to sense into this majestic
world, to get her thinking about a seed breaking open, growing,
stretching towards sunlight. Like babies do. Like plants do. Like all of
creation does.
I have come back to the present. I
remember that I am walking on catalpa leaves without Rosie. I find
myself wondering if I imagined her. Maybe only the catalpa leaves were
real and she a figment of my imagination? Am I a figment of my
imagination too? Being her mom is, or was, so central to my sense of
self and my sense of self got shattered when I lost her. Now I have to
invent myself again and I don't want to invent a new me. I want to be
Rosie's mom. The hardest aspect of losing her, I think, is the way it
plays with my memories. I have what I am calling memories of what it
felt like to love her while I raked those damn leaves and talked to her
about everything. Inside these memories, I was a warm, loving, good
mommy. Did I make that up? Maybe loving Rosie was a story I made up.
Maybe I was a horrible mother and I made up memories of being a good
one. These kinds of thoughts don't make me as sick as they used to but
they are often with me. The catalpa leaves brought them on this time.
My
daughter told me, the day I dropped her off at Cornell, which I helped
make possible in a million ways, she said "Now that I am in the Ivy
League, I don't want to have anything more to do with you." That was
the last time we saw one another until, on a trip to my hometown of
Chicago recently, where she lives these days, I went to her office
building just so I would know where my kid spends some of her life. Just
to have an image of her in a place, safe, happy. Things went awry, she
became aware I was there and she threatened to have me arrested for
trespassing.
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