THOUSANDS OF FREE BLOGGER TEMPLATES

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Speak

I had a scare last week. I thought my mom was starting to lose her mind. I took the rational approach and started thinking about what needed to be done. Would she have to be put in a home? Could I afford that? Could I afford the house payment? Where would we all live? What about the pets? After an hour or so of rationally freaking out, I realized that I should get a professional opinion before I commit to anything (even if it is just a hypothetical commitment).

I think most of her "mind slips" as I shall call them, boiled down to stress and end of the year (school year, she's a teacher) stuff. However, she is going to be 62 this year and I can't help thinking that my grandmother, my mother's mother, was 69 when she died of a stroke. She was in peak condition too. After the stroke it only took three days for her to go. Is it better to go so unexpected and quickly? I think I could handle that better than loosing someone slowly. Watching their mind and health leave them day by day. How would my sister handle it? She has such a short fuse, I never know when she will blow.

Over the years, my sister and I have grown accustomed to my mother's lengthy stories. She tends to take stories that would be relatively interesting if she stuck to the main point, and turn them into 10 minute ramblings that rarely end where they started. Usually its just rambling about things my sister and I have no interest in what so ever. We have two strategies when she gets going on one of these, either tune it out and nod your way through it or stop her as soon as she gets off track and tell her to wrap it up! Either way she tends to get upset. Yesterday, in the middle of a ramble about traveling from one store to another and not being able to find more green Martha Stewart garden fencing to match what we already had, I realized that it didn't matter that I had no interest in green Martha Stewart fencing, or matching anything (its rare that my socks match), it was what was bugging her and she wanted to let it out. So I responded, "well green and brown look the same from far away and colorblind people won't be able to tell the difference." She was amused that I had joined in for a second and then she continued on to the thrilling conclusion; she settled on brown fencing that was the same height.  I was glad that our conversation about nothing of real importance was the heaviest conversation we had had in recent days. 


I tend to forget formality (hi, how are you?) and speak to the point. 

I am going to the store. Do you need anything?

Bread. Creamer.

Ok. 

Oh wait, bananas.

Ok.

When people first meet me, they think I am shy. This couldn't be farther from the truth. I am a watcher, an observer. When I do speak, I speak with knowledge. I speak with purpose, often the purpose is to make you laugh because then you will like me. I speak to give directions. I speak to protest. I speak to explain. I speak so much that when I get home I fall silent. I am the anchor for all that is in the middle and rational in this house. I carry this life alone, next to my family, and alone. To find peace my sister flees the house and I hide in my room, and my mother leaves us to our own devices, afraid that she has failed us. Even now I am hiding, typing away what I won't say.  I will speak the burden and heavy thoughts that my sister and mother will not, but not until I have to. For now I will type. My heavy thoughts will go back on the bottom of the shelf. The next time I speak, it will be with purpose. 

0 comments: