jlsathre

jlsathre
Location
Illinois,
Birthday
July 30
Bio
I'm a lawyer in my past life, who got the kids through college and decided to try something different and a little more fun. A used book store sounded like a good idea, so that's where I am for now. I just hadn't counted on a recession or E-readers and am a little afraid there's going to be a third act. In the meantime, I have plenty to read and a little time to write. Not a bad way to spend a day.

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Salon.com
Editor’s Pick
NOVEMBER 30, 2011 9:42AM

The Things I Didn't Keep of Mom and Dad's

Rate: 15 Flag
  Behind the checkout counter of my used bookstore is a large bulletin board overflowing with  
things I've found in books. Most people don't notice it  because the store is also overflowing.
There are books on the floor, books stacked precariously on top of every empty space, and
books two rows deep on most shelves. 
  Although I love all the books, it's the things that I find inside them, added by the owners and not
the authors, that really intrigue me: the ten-your old payroll check that made it inside of a book
instead of the bank, the picture of the mom hugging her two young sons, which she'll someday
remember taking, but not be able to find, the note from Richard Nixon on White House card
stock, a coupon for 10 free condoms, a wedding snapshot.  Stories within stories.
  I think of them as a type of inscription--giving me a hint of the person who owned the book, but
not coming close to telling the whole story.
  I like the actual inscriptions even better, but I can't make a bulletin board with them because
I can't bring myself to tear out the page or to separate the inscription from the book that inspired
it.  Instead, I keep these books intact and price them a little higher than I should.
  A few I don't price at all, but keep for myself on my desk until the day comes that I forget why
they're there, and put them on the shelf by mistake.  When that happens, I always hope that
someone else will read the inscription and give some more life to it.
  There is one book that I've never mixed with the others.  It's an ordinary book--a ninth
printing of an anthology of short essays about living in the United States.  It has no monetary
value and no markings other than an inscription on the first blank page that says simply, “For Bob
K., When I die. Betsy.”  Whenever I look at the inscription, I am reminded of Tim O'Brien's
book, "The Things They Carried."
  Except that I always think, "The things we keep."  
  When my parents died several years ago, it was left to my sister and me to empty their
house of all its contents.  There were no directions--no inscriptions in books-- just a modest six
room house full of  the things that Mom and Dad had kept for over 50 years. To Ellen and me, that 
house with all its contents was "home," even after all this time. 
  We had spent our entire childhoods there, and had returned for birthdays, weekends, and
nearly every Christmas for over thirty years.  Mom's clothes had expanded into our closets, but
our rooms still bore our signatures. The focal point of Ellen's room remained a large painting of a
megaphone and a Marshall Lion, our high school mascot.   The bottom drawer of my closet
remained filled with my high school papers, the upper shelf with college and law school textbooks.  
We both knew in which drawer Mom kept her recipes, where Dad kept his change, and how
each scratch got on the dining room table. 
  But this would be the first time we knew the house without Mom and Dad.
  As we turned into the driveway, we pulled behind the maroon Impala with expired plates that
had only been moved once in the the four years that Mom and Dad had been in the nursing home. 
That one occasion was when we brought Dad back to the house not long after he had suffered his
stroke.  He had been through months of rehab but had only gained limited use of his right side and
almost no speech.  Evidencing the mysteries and perplexities of the brain, he was able to sing
whole songs, but spoke only the words "Yes, ma'am" and "No, ma'am," both with almost
complete randomness.  Whatever damage the stroke had caused, it had left him in an odd
state of benign contentment, where he was never fully engaged with the world around him, but
always able to find ESPN on his TV.
  Because he could shuffle along slowly but couldn't do steps, we moved the Impala so we could
drive him right up to the back door that had only one low step. Dad seemed content to be going
on an outing, but showed no interest in, or recognition of, where we were going until we walked 
across the back porch and through the door into the kitchen.  Suddenly I heard a soft guttural, 
"Oh, my," and, as I looked at Dad, I saw tears running down his cheeks. I immediately turned him
around and headed back to the car.  By the time we got outside he was fine.  It was as if a switch
had been turned on at the site of the kitchen table where he had eaten a thousand breakfasts, and
turned off as soon as he couldn't see it. 
  The day Ellen and I returned to pack up the house, the Impala was again parked near the front
on a slab of concrete where Dad had helped me carve my initials and make a handprint in 1958. 
As I stepped out of the car, I saw the indentation of that tiny hand and heard the same guttural
"Oh, my," escape my lips.
  We walked across the yard and onto the sidewalk where Mom used to bring out pitchers of
Kool-Aid for our lemonade stands. The crumbling concrete of the front steps that served as the
tiers for every birthday party photo led us to the porch where all day monopoly games were 
regularly played with neighboring kids in the heat of summer vacations.
  After I fumbled with Dad's keys and opened the front door, Ellen and I were met with the
chill of a house unlived in.   We had come armed with trash bags and cleaning supplies, but set
them down as we entered.  We both turned to the front room as if we announcing our safe return
from a late night date and saw Dad and Mom's recliners sitting empty across from the plaid
couch and the consoleTV.  The end tables that we had bought and hauled home from
a Tennessee vacation forty years ago still held the candy dish that was brought out once
grandkids started coming.   
  We wandered from room to room coming face to face with different and overlapping memories.
  Neither of us knew how or where to start. There was both too much and too little.  Too much to
keep.  Too little to show for the actual lives of the people who lived here. Too much to remember. 
Too little that we had forgotten.
  We ended up in the back bedroom which still held the bedroom set that was the first furniture 
bought by Mom and Dad after they married. Unlike sets of today, it had a vanity where we
both had spent hours trying on Mom's make-up and the clip on earrings that still
sat in the recessed compartments of an old candy box.  It was here that Ellen and I crept when
we woke up with bad dreams and  where Dad slept during the day every third week, after
working the midnight shift at the local chemical factory. It was during those weeks that the
Monopoly games were played since we had to be quiet and stay away from the open windows
of the back bedroom.
  It was also the room that held the chest with the letters that we had never been allowed to read
as children.  They were letters that Dad had written to Mom during the war before they had
even met.   We knew right where the chest was kept and went to the back of  the long walk-in
closet and brought it out.  As we opened the lid, we found that the contents had grown to
include various records and reports from our earlier years. I found a college report card with a
“C” in English that I didn't remember getting. Ellen found a report card with all “A's” and gloated.
  We are good friends now, but growing up we led mainly parallel lives.  I was the pesky younger
sister and she was the obnoxious older one.  In a small rural community in the '50's,
where we had a neighborhood full of kids and an almost unfettered freedom to roam the
whole town, we simply didn't need each other.  Now we do.
  When we got down to the letters, we spread them out on the olive green bedspread that
matched the olive green shag carpet and started reading. There was nothing in any of them that a
nine year old could not have read. They were sweet innocent letters with references to bowling
scores and army rations, and only subtle hints of a growing affection between two people during
a time that we didn't fully understand.  Other than sending each other "kisses to the stars,"  there
was little to suggest that this was the start of a life long love affair. Yet Mom had kept all the
letters without knowing the ending.
  By the time Ellen and I had finished reading the letters, it was getting dark and we had accomplished
nothing. We gathered up the chest, photo albums, and a popcorn tin filled with photographs,
and called it a day.  We both promised to come back the next weeked, but ended up putting
it off as too soon.   
  Eventually we filled up numerous trash bags, gave away the clothes to a soup kitchen and 
the car and furniture to a young couple that could use them.  We let the six grandchildren who
served as the pallbearers for their grandparents choose the things they wanted, and then we let
them share the earnings from an "estate sale" of what was left.  It turned out to be an inheritance
for each of them of seventy- eight dollars in small bills that was probably spent on CD's and take
out pizza.
  Like Betsy and her book, my tendency is to keep things, and I had predicted that most of the
contents of Mom and Dad's  house would end up being transferred to mine.   But leaving the house
that first day, I knew that it wasn't the things that remained inside that I wanted to keep.
  I did take a few things-- the candy dish, a ledger with page after page of Dad's handwriting, and
an address book with pages of Mom's.  But mainly what I kept  were things I didn't have to
carry.  I had found that I didn't need very much.  I already had the stories.   

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Comments

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A beautiful piece about a journey most of us will take some day. May your memories, stories, and even some clip-on earrings sustain you. A deserved EP.

And thanks for the nice comments on my engagement and cigarettes piece. I like the idea of presenting the stories in frames.
Beautiful and so, so true. Thank you.
I'm going to wander around the house now and finger my dad's penknife, an engraved silver cigarette case, my mom's cookbooks, and the small, double-frame pictures of them with the Christmas "To-From" gift tag stuck on the back with the note "Something to remember us by" handwritten by my mother. Then I'll hug it to my chest, slide to the floor, and sob, and when I get up they will be more with me than before.

This is one of the most moving pieces I've ever read here. Thank you for this.
Excellent, thoughtful, detailed, personal writing.
I am enriched by reading this, thank you.
A beautiful portrait of a family, and of loss. Nicely done.
Thank you to everyone for the nice comments.
I loved this. Filled with details that make it sing and insights woven so deftly in they almost slip by, except instead they go right to your heart and make you stop and read the sentence again ("...we simply didn't need each other then. We do now.") Well done, thank you.
This was beautiful and touching. I hav tears in my eyes. Thank you for sharing this.
Thank you so much for the glimpse into your life and your parents. What a gift this was tonight for me, as I am sitting here missing my family who all live states away but thankfully I have all of them still. I appreciate the beauty you put behind your story.