I have an older sister named Kay. We don't speak, we never exchange gifts, and we've never borrowed each other's clothes. There are no fading, curling black and white photos of her, age eight, awkwardly cradling a newborn me just home from the hospital.
Kay was born at full-term but breathed too soon, and with that over-eager breath, ingested amniotic fluid. She was cleaned up by the nurses and placed in a bassinette where whatever could be done for her back then was done. On the other side of the nursery window my father stood, murmuring over and over, "The more I see her, the more I want her."
From that day on, when my father spoke of Kay, he called her "Kay-Baby."
When Kay died, my father got back to his job, and my mother returned to the full-time care of their toddler son. That's how the Greatest Generation grieved, by blowing their noses, wiping their tears, and getting back to the tasks at hand. Not long after that, my parents had another child, a boy who thrived. They considered their family complete and once again, got on with things.
Almost seven years later, I was born, an oops baby if ever there had been. My mother was 32 when her doctor broke the news, my father, 47.
My mother wasn't thrilled to learn of her pregnancy. In those days, even at her age, she was considered a bit old to be pregnant, and her boys had long since stopped draining her with the demands of babies. Then, my aunt said something that turned my mother around: "Maybe this one will be a girl."
My father was delighted from the get-go.
Like my brothers and unlike my sister, I was born without complications, and I knew from early on that a baby girl had come before me but died. I stood on a kitchen chair one day, helping my mother bake cookies. I asked her if I was Kay. To me it made perfect sense that if a little girl was born and died, the sister born after would be the kind of do-over that God would permit Himself under special circumstances.
My mother's reaction to my question, along with her response, are lost to me now.
I pictured Kay's soul as a beautiful piece of cloth blowing in the breeze and hovering over the world. With my birth, it floated back down, became my soul and helped me become me, Kay-Baby restored.
The idea that I might be Kay, that the universe can recycle a soul taken out of circulation too soon, still appeals to me somehow.
Today Kay-Baby's remains lie in a cemetery next to my parents'. But maybe, just maybe, the bigger part of her is sitting here writing these words.
A chipped demitasse embodies a paradoxical yet peaceful coexistence of beauty, flaws, fragility, frivolity, and strength. It's us, and it's life.
Showing posts with label siblings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label siblings. Show all posts
Friday, March 27, 2015
Kay-Baby
Labels:
baby,
brothers,
death,
Generation,
Greatest,
grief,
loss,
parents,
reincarnation,
siblings,
sisters,
souls,
survivors
Sunday, February 16, 2014
Short Comedians
My
ex-husband is a stand-up comic who for years milked our kids for all the free
material he could get. Actually, being a writer, I did, too so I’m not pointing
any fingers. Now the kids are teeenagers and suddenly they aren’t that funny
anymore. Any parent of adolescents knows what I mean. But the ages of three to
ten were the golden age of kiddie comedy in my household, and it was great
while it lasted.
When my son, Jon was three, he was
sick and I left him in the car with my mother while I ran into the store for
his prescription.
“Grandma,” he announced from his
little car seat in the back, “I’m gonna throw up.”
“Just a minute, Jon; I’m coming,” my
mother said, fumbling to unfasten her seat belt and find something for him to
vomit into. Due to my fortuitous failure to clean the car, she was able to get
her hands on a fast-food paper bag. “I’ll be right there,” she said.
Scrambling out of the car, despite her bad knee and reliance on a cane,
she threw open Jon's door and thrust herself in just in time to hear him say, "But not
today."
Jon was the kind of kid who would chatter happily to anyone who would listen -
and often to those who hadn't planned to. One day, when he was about
four-years-old, a friend of my husband's stopped by. And even though Jon had
never seen him before, he linked his arm through Larry’s, guided him to the
love seat and cuddled up against him. Within seconds, Larry couldn’t get a word
in edgewise as Jon explained the intricate plotline of a Teletubbies video he
was watching.
“. . . and the yellow one is La-La. La-La almost always has an orange ball with
her. The purple one is Tinky-Winky and Tinky-Winky has a big purse. The red one
is Po, and Po . . .”
After at least five minutes of this,
Larry glanced at me and made a brief comment, prompting this gentle reprimand from Jon, “Excuse me, Larry,
but if you’re going to keep talking like that, you’re not going to be able to
hear this.”
By the time our daughter, Sydney was
three, she had perfected a dry, low-key delivery that takes some comics years
to develop. And when she was three-and-a-half, her father and I were sitting at
the desk of a carpet salesman who was writing up our purchase. Sydney started
fiddling with the man’s calculator. When I told her to put it back, she put me
in my place by quietly but arrogantly dismissing me: “Talk to the man, Mommy.”
Flash forward to Jon age five and
Sydney age seven. I was driving somewhere with the two of them in the backseat.
Not surprisingly, Jon started complaining about his sister.
“Mom, I’m never going to believe
Sydney again. She always tells me these really great things she’s going to do
for me and then she never does them. She just lies to me, so I’m never going to
believe her ever again.”
Sydney executed a masterfully
elongated silence before saying in a very sly tone, “Hey Jon, I’ve been workin’
on that rocket ship for ya.”
“Oh really?” Jon called out in a
delighted little yelp, all excited and ready to jump on board.
When I recounted this anecdote to
the kids the other day, Jon said, “I hate you for lying to me about that
rocket, Sydney.”
And
Sydney said, “It’s still in the attic.” She was even lying to him about the
attic since we don’t have one.
Anyway,
even though they rarely cough up charming and quotable nuggets these days, the
kids are still the cheapest source of material my ex and I have – at least
until they get wise to us, unionize and demand compensation. If that happens,
I’ll hire a couple of four-year-olds. Like elephants, they work for peanuts -
except for the ones who are allergic, and they work for cookies.
Labels:
adolescents,
brothers,
children,
comedians,
comedy,
comics,
funny,
humor,
innocence,
innocent,
little,
lying,
material,
rivalries,
rivalry,
siblings,
sisters,
teenagers,
Teletubbies,
witticisms
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