A Sense of Home
My childhood homes were many, chaos filled and transitory. My mother’s wanderlust disrupted life whenever we found a place to call home. I attended too many schools to remember, learned to disconnect from friends with ease, finally making no friends, because within that ‘ease’ was heartbreak every time I had to say goodbye. Those goodbyes generally occurred every year. That was the timeline: one year. Then mom got itchy feet, sold everything she owned, and move on to a new life, believing the grass is always greener somewhere else. It never was.
These days I jokingly call her the merchant of chaos, but that appellation is a thin veil masking the pain,
abandonment and shattered reality of what should have been a refuge. Because of
her, the concept of ‘home’ was alien to me; what is home? What and who should
be in it?
I recall vividly, when I was ten years old, returning from
school one day to a garage sale on the front lawn, all our furniture being
sold, my bedroom set included. I loved that bedroom set with a French
provincial white four poster bed and matching vanity. It was mine. How could
she sell it?
That day, my bedroom furniture went off with an old woman. The
red tail lights of her truck at the corner of Stanton Street, blinked, then
turned onto 35th and disappeared. A deep root of resentment set in
my bones that day. I knew with the fading of those tail lights we would soon
move, leave our house, school, friends and start over, again.
Over the next three years my parent’s fights grew to
legendary proportions; arrests, house fires, crashed cars, broken bones, or
them disappearing for days on end, leaving me to tend my three younger brothers.
I learned home was not a safe place, not a place where I could get attached to
anything, or trust those whom I should have been able to trust the most. And
though they loved us, my brothers and me,
we were forgotten in their war. Dad slipped into alcoholism and mom, her
bizarre gypsy ways, including, but not limited to giving things away with no
regard for what was paid for those things or what they meant to the holder. Twice
we ended up in a house with no furniture. Dad would buy new, she’d get mad and
sell it all again. Dad finally disappeared with the last furniture sale.
I left ‘home’ at thirteen, then moved back because I had
nowhere to go. At sixteen I left again, for good. I couch-surfed, lived in a
car, a church basement and was blessed by a cousin who took me in.
It took forty years of roaming humanity’s desert to finally
find a safe place to call home. Now, I have one with gardens, water view and a
loving husband who swears (after our last move) we will never move again–music
to my ears. We lived in our last house over a decade and we will stay in this
one till we’re too old to go up the stairs, then it’s a condo, we’ve decided. I
thrive in the normalcy of his steadfast plans. I’ve learned home is more than a
house that can be sold, left and abandoned, it’s who is in that house that
makes it a sanctuary. Home is no longer an alien concept to me. Home is my
unwavering husband, no matter where we live.
My wander-lusting ‘merchant of chaos’ mother resents my
normalcy and mocks me with her teen-angst voice whenever we argue. We argue a
lot. Thankfully I’ve come to understand she is not a well person. She is an
eternally rebellious and trapped teenager who wants to leave home, and I am the
parent. To her any belongings, children, husbands or homes are shackles and
must be banished, escaped and left behind.
For example, last year after we moved her into a fairly posh
retirement residence, they had a Halloween dance at a neighboring rec-center. After
not speaking to me for a week because I left her in a ‘home’, she called and
asked if I’d drive her to the party. When I arrived she descended the stairs slowly
so I could take in the full view of her costume; a black and white striped
prison uniform with a chain belt.
She got into my car without a word, sat smiling and looking
forward, her point made.
I shook my head, started the engine and said, “Do we need to
stop somewhere to pick up a ball and chain?”
Now, that one year mark has hit. She’s serving her sentence in the ‘home’ but is planning
an escape. She has one friend left who can drive (during the day) and they
think they’re going on a road trip, you
know to where that grass is greener, and apparently where men have hair and
teeth. They are in their eighties and need naps about every two hours. I don’t
think they’ll get far, I think that hair and teeth will be fake, and I know the
grass won’t be greener.
We have told her if she tries to leave this safe haven we
will never help her find one again. She knows we mean it this time. And though
she has these little rebellions, I don’t think she will actually leave the
retirement center where they feed, medicate, entertain and allow her the
freedom to come and go with no strings. I think she’s finally grown up enough
to recognize the need for a home.
Our mother, regardless of antics loves us deeply in her own
dysfunctional way, and in that love is our sense of humor, humility, and yes,
finally a sense of familial home.
Mindy Halleck is a Pacific
Northwest author who in 2014, after many years as a non-fiction author released
her debut novel, Return To Sender–a literary thriller set on the Oregon Coast in the 1950’s. The novel
is based on one of her short stories, The Sound of Rain, which received
Honorary Mention in a Writer’s Digest Literary Contest. Halleck also
blogs at Literary Liaisons and is an active member of the Pacific Northwest writing community. In
addition to being a writer, Halleck is a happily married, globe-trotting
beachcomber and three-time cancer survivor. www.MindyHalleck.com
3 comments:
I'll send to my daughter so she will know what to expect!
Hard to explain stuff like this to people, how these feelings get lodged into the bones.
Very moving, Mindy.
Post a Comment