Thursday, December 1, 2016

Sister; Missed Her.

Today my lovely wife asked if I planned to be in touch with my sister this Christmas.  Hmmm...I still have the card I bought for her last Christmas... As ever, I planned to send it but clearly it wasn't a priority.  My wife went on to encourage me to send the 'letter' I wrote almost 2 years ago (see post entitled AWOL).  I am quite sure I won't, as it was not written for her.  I wrote that letter to vent my spleen, to clarify my feelings and to try to understand how we got to where we are.  Wherever that is.

I was so angry at my sister for so long.  It was so easy, in the aftermath of our mother's illness and death, to blame her completely for the breakdown between us.  But it always takes two to tango.  I am as much at fault (if blame is the right paradigm to consider, here) as she is.  She absented herself and I dreamed that my need was visible, from thousands of miles away.  I thought she should know instinctively that I was caught in the leg-hold trap of the dying parent.  And what that would feel like.

I expected her to understand what it is like to truly, finally lose a parent, as an adult (we'd done it as kids, but it is vastly different as an adult). Because she had divorced herself from our mother years before, she could never know that type of loss, close up.  (She seemed to understand it when her friends went through it, though.) I thought, with all of our shared experiences, especially with other members of our family, that she would also share this.  Apparently I thought that we were identical twins, with shared pain, unknowable knowledge and mistaken identities. I thought the universe would tell her what I needed her to know.  Because it seemed that this had happened in the past.  Truth or fallacy?  Don't know.  Was that when we lived in the same time-zone?  So that our experiences were more similar?  Or was it an accident of conversation that made me feel as though she understood and maybe anticipated my feelings?  Or was it just me, projecting the support I needed as coming from my only sibling?

I expected too much of my sister.  I don't know when this started, this idealization, this shiny, perfect picture, but it is not the truth.  My sister is mortal and has faults and foibles and insecurities.  I had always imagined otherwise, that any shortcoming in our relationship was mine;  my failure to live up to her example, my weakness, my lack of foresight.  I guess I put the balance in our relationship into an equation that said she was right (almost aways) and I was wrong (almost always).  I remember as a very young kid agonizing over why she didn't want to play with me.  I would ask our mother what I could do to convince her to spend time with me.  (Our mother had few suggestions, that I recall, not having had younger siblings, herself--she was a triplet, which may explain why she was so concerned with treating us exactly the same...but that's another therapy session!) I believed without question that I was lacking, not that my sister was thoughtless and rude (and quick with her fists, when we were young).  And this mistaken idea followed me into adulthood, as such things do.

What a burden that must have been, to bear the unreasonable expectations of another.  I wonder how this shaped her?  Did she always feel like she had to keep up with my sky-high expectations of her?  Did she feel unable to share insecurities, failures, struggles?  Did she feel like she needed to maintain my image of her, wearing uncomfortable armour in battles that were not hers?

I don't know the answers, here.  I think that she felt inferior to me, to many.  She commented more than once over the years that I was 'the smart one,' better with money, had a 'noble' job.  As though there can only be one bright person in a family, that there is only one way to successfully manage money or earn vocational respect.  This is a new piece to the puzzle, for me:  my sister as vulnerable, as struggling, as unsure.

So it seems now, that the person I have to forgive is myself.  I need to let myself off the hook for expecting too much, for believing my childhood myths about my sister.  The ones that did not let me seei her as a full person, but only as a caricature of the supler-hero who could ride a two-wheeler before me. 

Monday, August 29, 2016

When Bad Things Happen to Bad People

Lately, I have been trying to grow up.  I have been trying to be more magnanimous, more generous of spirit, more serene.  I have been trying not to get caught up in petty disagreements, not to spring to judgement, not to blame, not to maliciously over-simplify.

It was going so well.

And then someone in my life was diagnosed with cancer.  Lung cancer, with metasteses to the bones.  Horrible, right?  I have been trying not to imagine the drowning, gargling end, the cleaver-deep pain--a nightmare waiting to happen.  I have been trying not to think about these things because I think he deserves every last, painful, gasping moment.

Kind of flies in the face of my goals in paragraph 1, eh?

He is someone I met about 20 years ago and have had regular contact with since.  There is a lot about our relationship that is contrived--there are plenty of templates and examples around, in life, in the media, in art to build this lie upon.  He believes that we have a relationship at one end of the sincerity spectrum and I believe we are far at the other end.  I lie to him constantly.  Every time I see him, email him or talk to him.  I let him believe gigantic untruths, allowing his assumptions to paint a cheery picture in his head.  I tell myself lies, too, to get through these moments.  I have to manufacture a sliver of reality in my head where he is the guy he thinks he is and where I am dumb enough not to see through it.  I swallow his bullshit persona of 'life of the party' and 'elderly hipster' and 'father of the century.'  I laugh at his jokes (except the hateful ones).  I listen to his advice and opinions and nod along, letting his fog wash over me.  

I play the game, as much as I can.  I put on my disguise as I ring his doorbell and afterward, take it off in the car, before we are out of the driveway.  I shake out the crabs and fleas and cockroaches, the rot and the grave wax and release my frustration on the dashboard.   I hate this game, but I play it all the same.

I play it because it is easier for the other people in my life, if I do.  I am late to this party.  Other people have been putting up with him for far longer than I.  There are defined roles and they are all limited.  It is not my place to changes these rules that are older than I am.

He is an old man, fearful and in agony and alone.  He is pathetic and pitiable.  He is needy and helpless and bewildered.  He knows he is going to die--soon--and he is terrified.

And I am glad. 

I am gleeful that he having an isolated, agonizing death.  I am grateful that his dying is traumatic and lengthy.  In these things, I am comforted that sometimes, the world seems to be in balance.

How so?

This man is a child molester.

Of at least one child.  (Oh, god, please let it only be one child.)  For years.  And years.  And years. 

Most of his fear and isolation is of his own making.  You cannot victimize someone repeatedly without putting up huge walls around them and yourself.  You cannot create a climate of complete control and impunity without being truly alone.  And if you can make actions such as his routine and agreeable to your conscience--your grip on the truth will slide down the toilet with the rest of your putrid effluvia.

So, in this way, we lie to each other.  He pretends to be a 'pillar of the community' and I pretend I don't want to vent my eye-bleeding outrage with a lighter and bamboo slivers.  We play the game with our masks of civility and our code of conduct.  Occasionally, one of us slips--his attempt at 'here's what porn I'm surfing' chats or slapping my ass in greeting;  my natural sarcasm slipping though--and we have to realign ourselves to the game that we have agreed to play.

And yes, I see the irony.  I want to be 'good,' more honest, cleaner but I am caught in a game of 'who can lie better' and 'let's maintain the horrific status quo'. My disingenuity is improving.  I can lie better, stronger, faster than before.  In agreeing to protect other people, I am also protecting him.  In trying to do the contextually 'right' thing, I am, myself, honing the skills that I hate in him.  Damned if I do, eh?

Serenity?  Hard to come by.  Judgement?  Got lots, thanks.  Generosity?  I'll get back to you...

Accepting my feelings?  Honouring survivors?  Making it work, minute to minute?  Working on it. And doing fairly well, thank you very much.