My
Adoptive Mother
I
think of you when my voice erupts in snaps that rip through the house, snap,
snap, snap.
From
you I learned to grow a shell. To allow it to shield me, to hide me, to hold
me.
I
snapped at my husband Zip when he taught me Tai Chi to help me manage my work
stress.
“What’s wrong with you? How could you have forgotten!?” I had screamed,
screamed, screamed, righteously sure he had muddled the first move.
As
a Health Care social worker during the pandemic, my shell has become brittle.
I
still knew you when your shell was smooth and splashed with colour. Your eyes sparkled and you smiled, smiled,
smiled and your sun-infused radiance was contagious.
You
loved those that needed you.
You
moved a massive turtle to the side of the road ignoring my adoptive fathers’
warning, “it could be a snapper.”
I
admired you.
I
was four when you volunteered at the Center for R* Children. You took me with you.
You
refused to use the ‘R’ word in its title.
Maybe too often you heard it used as a taunt towards the different.
At
the Center I didn’t need to speak, to stut, stut, stutter, to force the words
out from behind my teeth, to force my head out from its shell. Kids were enough like me and I was enough
like them. We played together, clasped
hands and watched the turtle swim. Her
back was edged in olive-green squares that gleamed, “like floor,” my best
friend Anna squealed. We stared at her as she stared at us, our braids
intertwined--hers blond and mine black.
After
decades as a social worker, the first crack appeared as I tried to sleep. My
clients’ anguished anger would flash hot, the images clouded like a murky
pond. Rivulets of sweat pooled under my
arms, between my breasts, in the small of my back and I’d fling off the covers.
I’d shiver and thump to retrieve them and slam, slam, slam, back into bed. The selfish part of me needed Zip to wake and
satisfied, I’d hear a groggy, “let me massage your temples.” After, Zip slipped
slip back to sleep and I’d watch the clock drag itself to morning.
Only
you and my father and sister had understood my speech. At school frustrated teachers asked me to
write down what I was trying to say.
Finally, around age seven, I was understood by most. Yet when I was tired or nervous, I would need
to repeat, repeat, repeat.
I’d
retreat to my shell.
The
second crack appeared as my speech disintegrated. My head bobbed to reshape my mouth, I’d spit
out words like scrabble tiles, incomprehensible. Sometimes
an off-topic word popped out unbidden and my skin hid my heat but not the
dribble on my chin.
People that
didn’t know me would then ask, “where are you from originally?”
I’d
retreat to my shell.
You never
said anything about my speech. You
always understood me, never laughing or correcting or suggesting. In this one area, you let me be.
I
volunteered in my school’s Resource room when I was nine. As I grew older, like you, I volunteered
multiple places. I won the ‘Volunteer of
the Year’ award when I was 14 and was interviewed on the local TV channel.
You
inspired me to become a social worker.
You
volunteered all spring and summer but as fall came, you retreated to your shell
to watch TV as you knitted hats and socks, “for the babies at the hospital.”
When
my father retired, he joined you to watch Carnation Street and eat microwave
dinners and look forward to spring.
Your
husband, my father, was arrested for sexual assault on a minor. Women called you to tell you to leave him. Your dentures clicked and snapped.
You
retreated to your shell.
I
pleaded, “it’s never to late to change your life.” But your brittle shell had developed
fissures.
You
screamed at your husband, “Goddamn you, just die, just die, just die,” and when
he obliged, you snapped bitterness at his ghost. You spent more and more in your shell until
one day the cracks became too big. Your
shell couldn’t hold you.
You lost
your snap.
You
couldn’t wait any longer for the warm currents of spring.
The
police broke down the door to find your cold body crumpled on the bathroom
floor—a shell encased effigy amidst cigarette-scorched tiles.
The
quiet of the dead interrupted.
You
died before I could get to know you.
Your belongings left behind like pieces of cracked tile.
Zip says that maybe every now and again, I need to stick
my head out and snap, snap, snap.
But the pandemic may be ending.
Spring is coming.
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