Monday, April 8, 2013

The Forgotten One

I see him almost every day walking his dog. He goes to the gas station across the street, buys himself a coffee and his dog gets a hotdog. She isn’t on a leash. I’m not sure if she is so well trained, or just somehow understands that her human needs her by his side constantly.
            He stops to talk to me often. He makes sure I am settling into my new apartment, telling me it is his neighborly duty to ensure I’m doing well. His pockets seem to have an endless supply of milk bones, which has endeared my dog to him. It’s almost as if he cherishes the love from four-legged beasts more than a humans. He crouches down and greets my pup first, hugging her with strength that surprises me, considering his old age.
            We let our dogs play together while we sit on a picnic bench in our joined backyard. At first we talked about menial things like the bi-polar Ohio weather, where we adopted our dogs, and our shared military service. We compared our jobs while in service. I seceded, giving him the win on the worst military job imaginable. But then one day he uttered her name. Ruthanne. She was his dead wife. He says her name with reverence; I imagine how Mary must have uttered Jesus’ name while he was dying on the cross. Anguish, love, amazement.
            I’m afraid to speak and break the silence as he tells me about her.
            Ruthanne.
            She had red hair. He chuckles mostly to himself from some inside joke, and tries to explain it was because she was ‘flaming hot.’ His laugh turns to tears.
            His wrinkly hand, cracked with overuse, knuckles swelled with arthritis, pats his thigh for his dog to come over so he could pet her. She was there within seconds—always in tune with her master; such a source of comfort for him.  I could tell he was trying to suppress his tears in front of me. I take a drag off my cigarette and look across the lawn, watching my dog herd squirrels around the large yard, giving him time to gain composure. It’s a pride thing, I guess. I struggle to withhold my own insecurities.  I hate dealing with weepy people. It makes me feel uncomfortable.
            Ruthanne.
            She was an Army nurse and he was a LRRP, Long Range Reconnaissance Patrol for the Army. They met in Vietnam, and apparently recognized each other as soul mates.
            She soothed his demons, he said.
            He calls me honey. I hate it, but withhold a grimace. I hate endearments, but I don’t say anything. It seems almost as if he needs that connection to another human being. Not to mention I don’t remember his name. He’s told me a few times, but at the time, it never seemed important.
            I don’t want to feel pity for him, but sometimes I do.  Every day since he was married he woke up and lived his life for his wife. Now she’s gone. It has been two years, I think. She’s buried six-feet under and he’s lost. No sense in his world, nothing to live for but his dog.  It was hard not to feel pity when I realized he had no other family.
            His tears finally dry up and he continues to talk.
            Ruthanne.
            What a firecracker. She wanted to go skydiving for her 65th birthday. He laughs again, but this time withholds the tears. I’m grateful.
            Love shines in his eyes whenever he says her name. Every time we cross paths I get a new story from him. How she punched her kindergarten teacher in the gonads when she was a little girl, how she somehow managed to have dinner on the table every day, never forgot a birthday and enjoyed role reversal and would frequently buy him flowers just to say I love you.
            Ruthanne.
            I wish I could have met her. 
            I crushed the cigarette under my boot and he pulls me into a hug before I could go home. I almost shrug it off, but once again I allow it. He needs this human contact. I may not like it, but I endure it because I feel like it is my duty to take care of this old man.
            When I look back at these interactions I wonder how many other elders of our society are ignored and forgotten. I think of the older generation that comes into the video store where I work, and I feel a little bit of shame when I realize I don’t really give them the time of day. Sometimes they stay and want to talk, and I rush them out the door. This neighbor is making me change how I view and interact with people from the previous generations. Now I stop to chat with them and some of the stories and life experiences they have to offer are beyond amazing. This is a problem that people from my era need to recognize and fix. It’s uncomfortable, it’s awkward, but it needs to be done.  These old-timers need to be recognized and cared for.
Sometimes I view them as a nuisance, especially my neighbor, but pity, guilt and a maybe a little curiosity will ensure I am on that bench tomorrow, smoking another cigarette, listening to him talk about his dead wife.
            Ruthanne.
            This one is for you.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

It's a hockey birthday party.

     I tried. I really did. For a whole season, I strapped on these hockey skates, hand-me-downs that didn’t fit right. They pinched my toes and my heel slipped constantly. They hurt. My dad told me a handful of times if I got into the sport, he’d buy me new ones.
     It wasn’t fun. The boys on my team made fun of me because I was small. They treated me differently, and I wanted, so desperately, to be as strong as my sisters, but I just couldn’t do it. So I gave up. I tossed in the towel, and decided I liked soccer more, and pretended, throughout most of my grade school career, that this was true. 
     My dad tried. I didn’t realize this until I look back now as an adult. He took time out of his busy day to coach me and my team. I don’t think he realized how much I hated it. Not him coaching, but my team. My best friends were on the other team. I hated the girls I played with. During school a few of them had a tendency to push me in the dirt during recess and laugh at me and my tattered dirty clothes.
I had already given up hockey; I couldn’t give up soccer too.
It seemed like Taboo in my family.
She’s the youngest daughter. She doesn’t play hockey.
     People recognized me as, “the youngest Erickson” and “Meghan and Kristen’s younger sister.” There was always an added, she doesn’t play hockey.
     The demon in my life at the time always ensured people knew. She’d drag me to her side, grip my shoulder tight and tell everyone I played soccer, not hockey. She was proud of it, which made me hate it even more.
     And then something switched, and it seems as if overnight, she loved hockey, and then her tone changed. “Yeah, she only plays soccer.” Scorn. I heard it all the time.
                “You’re Meghan and Kristen’s sister, right?”
       No, my name is Monica.  "Yep."
                “So, when are you going to start playing hockey?”
       Never.    "Maybe next season." Fake smile. Gag. 

        For a handful of years in a row, some hockey tournament ran in mid-March. And for a handful of years in a row, I spent my birthday in a hockey rink, watching my sister’s play. Then we’d go out to dinner, and talk about hockey, and how the tournament was going. And what my sisters could do better next game. 
       I’d get a handful of ‘Happy Birthday’s’.  A friend, whose brother was on their team, once wrapped a gift for me. It was a radio in the shape of an alien head. It was awesome.
      Sometimes I got to unwrap my presents on the backseat of a moving car while driving home from Canada. Not exactly my definition of a fun birthday.

      It’s hard for me to write this, because I know my dad did everything in his power to make all of us happy. As an adult, I don’t blame him. I don’t hate him, in fact, I love my father. He is the strongest man I know, and the biggest, strongest pillar in my life.  I look back now and realize it wasn’t all bad. I had a few friends at these tournaments. I’m resilient. I bounce back. I actually play hockey now on a women’s team with my sister. I love it.
     Maybe this stemmed from my recent birthday. I just turned 25. I spent it at home listening to the Reservoir Dogs soundtrack on Vinyl.  I bought myself a small cake, and played Tomb Raider.  When people asked what I did for my birthday, and they seemed shocked and I see the pity, I immediately back track and say that was how I wanted it- just a quiet night in, hanging with my pup. And people believed it.
                But it was fucking lonely.  I may or may not have cried.