Radio Nowhere

[info]ying_ko_4


Radio Nowhere

Rough drafts, thoughts and letters home


Previous Entry Add to Memories Tell a Friend Next Entry
Writer's Block: Remembering mom
thoughtful
[info]ying_ko_4

What's your favorite memory of your mother?


View other answers

I doubt this qualifies as my favorite memory.  It is, however, a lasting one. 

Some years ago, probably close to 20 or so, I was working at a radio station in Boonville, MO and my mother was living and working in Marshall, MO.  About an hours drive away to the west.  Not a trip I made a lot, but often enough over the years. 

Mother was a practicing psychologist.  She'd gotten her Master's Degree and went to work for the State of Missouri.  She liked her job and was pretty good at it.  She also had the unnerving habit of playing therapist with the family.  Whether they participated or not, that was the case.  She could explain why everyone was the way they were.  Or at least how she saw things in that regard.

I was fortunate.  I was given special treatment.  I got TOLD what my problems were.  Somehow, she was never at fault.  This didn't dawn on me until years later, but not at that time.  She was good at noticing things, and realizing that I was hurting a lot at the time.  In a lot of emotional pain, to be honest about it.  I was the problem child.  I freely admit that.  Caused all sorts of problems for my parents.  I lived in "interesting times" and had a...unique...set of parents.  They were not well matched.  However, they don't test for that or make people get licenses to be parents so you make do with what you have.

This particular visit was emotionally draining.  I know now that my mother meant well.  At least, I hope the hell she did.  Because she inflicted a serious hurting on me that day.  It went a little like this...

She'd just moved in to her place a month or so ago.  Nice apartment and I was there to hang pictures, hook up her stereo, and general Son stuff.  Help out your mother kind of stuff.  I got fed, and the food was always good so it was a win-win situation.  After the stereo got hooked up, out came mother's records and tapes.  We had a lot of the same taste in music (and some that was not at all the same) so she put on a record and we ate and talked and seemed to be having a good time.  After a while, the Neil Diamond came out.   Neil Diamond is one of two artists I strongly associate with my mother.  The other is Tom Jones.  He has nothing to do with this story...

Mother put on the Diamond album (Greatest Hits, if memory serves) and when a particular song come on, she asked me to be quiet and listen intently to the lyrics.  Ok...I can do that.  And I was fine until the chorus came around;

"I am," I said
To no one there
An no one heard at all
Not even the chair
"I am," I cried
"I am," said I
And I am lost, and I can't even say why
Leavin' me lonely still


Which pretty well summed up how I felt about life at the time.  And mother knew it.   It felt like a body blow.  I could almost literally feel the air rush out of my lungs, my confidence seemed to dribble down my leg and puddle on the floor.  I felt like a little boy who had just wet the bed (again...).  I felt naked and exposed.  I felt betrayed.

I felt alone.

Mother brought this to my attention, but offered no way for me to deal with it.  I had these issues, I felt isolated and alone.  Thanks for pointing this out, Mother...but now what the fuck do I do?

No practical answer that I can recall.

I went slinking home to my little hovel in Boonville.  It was a lonely drive.  The pain had been brought out into the open.  I had to deal with it somehow, so I started drinking a lot again.  Self-medication was always a specialty of mine.  I was good at numbing the pain through "medicinal" hooch.  I used it as as excuse for bad behavior.    I used it as an excuse to avoid dealing with the issues that caused the pain.  I ran away and tried to hide from myself.  However, when I woke up all hung, flung and slung the next morning, I was still there.  I couldn't get away from me.

I can listen to that song now and think to myself that it's a song of a very lonely man.  I know I'm not that person anymore, but those feelings took some time to deal with and get past.  I also wonder if that was my mother trying to tell me something about her.  In a Freudian way, of course...

Happy Mother's Day, Mother.  Wherever you are, and sorry it's late...

(Share your thoughts)
My "problem child" is my son, Roger. I love that boy to bits and its all I can do not to kill him some days. His father had a similar reputation as a boy, and his mom was a school psychiatrist. This reads painfully familiar.

There are times when it helps to find out other people in the world have been there. Thank you.

From my current vantage point, I'm not at all certain that my mother was cut out for the job. Further, my father was there, but not really...if you know what I mean?

I've learned in life that while we all think our situations are unique, they are more similar than most people want to admit or even realize. I think it even says something to that effect in the Bible.

"Nothing is new under the sun..." and goes on about vanity. Song of Solomon, I think. Or Proverbs...

It's actually Ecclesiastes. And I didn't have to Google it. (grin)

[and the crowd goes wild!]

Thanks. I didn't remember where it was, just that it was...

Edited at 2008-05-14 03:41 pm (UTC)

And with my braggadocios comment out of the way, let me say that I cannot find the words to describe what reading this did to me. You bared a very tender part of your soul with this piece... even though you told it in an angry tone in some places. And varying the tone is a good thing. But the take-away is that you showed your hurt so plainly it is palpable. Very good use of words like slinking and hovel. Evocative.

And you know me. I always have to pick a favorite line:
"I couldn't get away from me."

My thanks for your kind words and insights.

My family is crazy too. Crazy in the sense that my mom is with a man she doesn't want to be with, but he has money so she doesn't want to leave, she is depressed and has extremely low self esteem. My brother is a pot head, but he has a plan to join the reserves when he's old enough and wants to become a biochemist and a botanist. My step dad is an alcoholic and we never know when he's going to blow up about something. I don't live in the same house as them anymore, yet they still manage to drive me crazy when I'm over there. What really drives me crazy though is when I confront them about their problems and we scream at each other for a while and then an hour later it's like nothing happened. They don't confront their problems and just drown them in alcohol. I'm the one that tries to be the therapist in the family. It's hard to do that with this family and now I see why therapy doesn't work with them. I've realized recently that I'm just like my mother in the sense that I have low self esteem and depression, but I'm fighting that because I don't want to be unhappy like she is. I've tried to help her become happier, suggested things to her, etc, but she seems very unreceptive. So, yeah, I kind of understand the crazy mother thing. Although the therapist situation is switched(i think I am considering that as a career.)

Mother's therapist tendencies were pretty destructive. She shared her ideas and opinions with everyone. She wasn't really trying to help, but to feel superior, I believe.

If you going back to school means you'll be a shrink, I think that's a fine idea. You write well which means you're no dummy. You should think about it.

ahh...people like that are not healthy. I'm glad you are doing better now.

I have a knack for "shrinking" myself and figuring out why I act the way I do. I've also done it to my boyfriend lol. Other possible careers would be teacher(religion related), or something related to the studying of religions although I might just study religions anyway since they fascinate me. I also would like to do something with animals since most people annoy me, even though I tolerate them...maybe that's why being a shrink interests me, I want to understand people better so they don't annoy me as much. hmm...

Whatever you end up doing, best of luck.

Self analysis can be a good thing. It works best with some outside perspective, I've found. Somebody who hasn't a vested interest in you, like a family member would. Somebody objective...just to bounce ideas off from time to time.

(Deleted comment)
I felt laid bare (as Mardeen noted) as I was writing this. The real temptation was to hit delete, and not post.

Sometimes, opening up makes you stronger. If you expose the inner you to others, you force yourself to face up to it yourself.

I am also glad that I am not that person anymore. He wasn't a very happy or nice guy.

(Deleted comment)
I'm a big proponent of "doing something" with emotions and things, especially self-destructive ones. Writing them down and sharing them is one way. Even though this particular story didn't need that kind of treatment, it keeps me honest.

(Share your thoughts)

Home