It’s Not Complicated

At the moment, a lot of us are waist deep in tangled tree lights, pine garlands, wrapping paper, bags and tags. Year after year, we promise to dial it back and embrace the season. To ground ourselves in the spirituality, the scent of spiced cider and the sounds of music.

My writer/friend, Constance, wrote this essay, Simple Gifts, as a reminder that the most gracious gifts are given, throughout the year, when least expected.

Simple Gifts
by Constance Costas

I come from a family of lousy gift givers. We’re a congenial bunch; no rifts divide us. But we’re stumped at the prospect of putting a bow on a box and saying, “Here. I picked this out just for you.” Our gifts often miss their mark. One Christmas when I was a teenager, a Crock Pot sent my mother sobbing from the living room. “I thought she wanted it,” my father wondered aloud, searching our wide eyes for answers.  She probably did. But now that I am married with two young children of my own, I understand why countertop appliances and gift wrap do not mix.

We’re wildly inconsistent, too. “Birthday present?” I’ll snipe at my brother, “I gave you one last year!” And we’re far too practical, grimly exchanging surge protectors or battery chargers. When you give the gift of smoke-detection, we reason, you give the gift of love.

I have learned not to take these things personally. My father, for instance, would give me the shirt off his back, but he doesn’t do gifts—or birthday cards for that matter. He handles his Christmas shopping in two ways; a) he doesn’t or, b) he dials my phone number and says, “I don’t have anything for your mother.”  I pick out a rosy-pink cashmere sweater (something she would never buy for herself), and he swoops into the store, returning home with an elegant wrapped box under his arm.

There will be no more Crock Pots.

Now that we’re grown, my brother and I skip the guessing games and get down to brass tacks. “What should I get you for Christmas?” he asks me.

“Good cheap wine,” I answer. My brother is a wine person. He swirls it and sniffs it and he knows all the good years. “Pick out some good ten-dollar bottles. Show me what to buy.”

When the wine bottles appear under the tree, they hold little mystery, but because he has selected them just for me, I am filled with anticipation. “This one goes with spicy food,” he begins. “Keep this for sipping at home; and when you’re invited to dinner, take this one.” Each bottle is a revelation, better than the next.  He has thrown himself wholeheartedly into this gift. And it shows.

My mother wraps her gifts in simple white paper tied with red ribbon but they’re always slightly ‘off,’ as if she’s gone shopping in a parallel universe. Deeply suspicious of department stores and the lip-glossed saleswomen who inhabit them, my mother would rather pierce her eyebrow than walk into, say, Bloomingdales to buy a Christmas present.

Instead she patronizes church bazaars, civil war museums, marine supply stores and, recently, a Viking souvenir shop in Norway. If you’re the sort of person whose Christmas wish list includes chow-chow from the St. Paul’s church choir or a miniature replica of a Viking ship, then you are in luck.

My mother’s shopping habits used to disappoint me. My school friends got ten-speed bikes and record players for Christmas, while I got lumpy hand-knit scarves for Christmas. But as I get older, I’m finding that the mall gives me a headache, too.

And the “sales extravaganza” that has replaced Christmas makes me wistful for the simpler days of kindergarten when my all-purpose gift was a clove-studded orange. I’ve come to admire her hard line approach: simply put, the Estee Lauder Holiday Candle holds no place in hers.

In fact, my mother’s best gifts have nothing to do with special occasions at all. Free from the gun-in-your-back pressure of Christmas shopping, she gives naturally and with grace. “It’s easier,” she concedes, “when the television isn’t threatening me with a deadline.” On a recent Tuesday, for instance, she quietly presented me with four of her dining-room chairs. “I’m not using all of them.” These gifts arrive all year long, not just when the tinsel is flying. She’ll breeze into my house, bucket in hand, to assemble an impromptu flower arrangement. And when she needs a new vacuum cleaner, she strikes a two-for-one deal with the salesman. “I can’t use them both,” she tells me over the phone, “why don’t you take one?”

Years ago, when I owned nothing but an air mattress and a milk-crate coffee table, she loaded a truck with an apartment’s worth of furniture and sent it to my new place in New York. When the movers marched in, they carried lamps, rugs, a sofa, antique dresser, and chair. They wiggled a kitchen table through the narrow door; then they went back for curtains with matching throw pillows, blankets, sheets, and towels. When the truck was finally empty, my new apartment had been transformed into my new home.

“It was nothing,” she protested, when I called to thank her.

But, truly, it was everything.

No Casseroles

The parade of warm casseroles into homes of families dealing with death or sickness is as plentiful in the South as ants on a picnic table. When the sickness is addiction or mental illness, however, you’d be lucky to get eye contact from a neighbor. Forget about a baked lasagna or a nine-by-thirteen of chicken divan to ease and comfort. Sadly, this beautiful story proves the point.

Slate.com Article – Families Dealing with Mental Illness

 

A Rare Opportunity in RIC

Coming on November 14:  A rare opportunity for any parent who is concerned about a child. The best-of-the-best in the field of adolescent substance abuse will be assembled in one place, sharing their knowledge and answering your questions.

Here’s who you’ll meet:

Marty Buxton, MD, ASAM,  Medical Director for Family Counseling Center for Recovery (FCCR)

Barbara Burke, LCSW, Director of Adolescent and Young Adult Programs at Family Counseling Center for Recovery

Cindy Blanton, NCACI, CSAC, Admissions Manager at Phoenix House Mid-Atlantic

Chuck Adcock, LCSW, Program Director of Family Counseling Center for Recovery

James Wanner, MD., Staff Psychologist for the Adolescent Program at Caron Treatment Centers

Mark O’Shea, LCSW, Licensed Clinical Social Worker, Private Provider

These are the people you’ll be begging to get an appointment with the minute you have concerns about substance abuse in a child. You’ll come away feeling informed and empowered as they answer these critical questions:

1.  Is it depression, ADD, ADHD, or substance abuse?

2.  When should I be concerned?

3.  What drugs are kids using today?

4.  Is marijuana addictive?

5.  What is the impact of substance abuse on families?

6.  What’s the difference between therapy and treatment?

Put this on your calendar.  I’ll see you there.

Adolescent Substance Abuse: What Are The Treatment Options?

November 14  6-8pm
Doubletree Midlothian Hotel,
1021 Koger Center Boulevard,
Richmond, VA, 23235  

The event is free but an RSVP is needed by November 7th.
Do it at www.caron.org/adolescent-sa-forum.  Or call 610.743.6525.
Questions?  Contact Jerri Shannon at jshannon@caron.org  757.876.5640.

 

Emotional Rescue

I twisted Constance’s arm until she said that I could post her essay.
The story is raw and totally unexpected.

_________________________________________________________________________________________

“Lynda asked me if she could post Emotional Rescue, an essay I wrote about the days after my brother died in 1976.  It’s about the ways we carry each other through difficult times.  And the spontaneous generosity of spirit that loss often inspires.  I was lucky enough to be on the receiving end of that generosity and, twenty five years later, I put it on paper.”

Constance Costas, originally published in skirt! Magazine, Charleston – 2000.

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The casserole ladies came to our house on a clear October afternoon when I was fourteen.  They bustled through the front door with card files and turkey Tetrazzinis like paramedics arriving at the scene of a terrible accident.

Left on our own, our family might have slumped, slack-jawed to the floor, but there was a funeral to plan, sympathy notes to file, and so many rolls to butter.

I kept to my room, mostly.  Tears came like waves of nausea.  And when they let up, like a pause in a rainstorm, I’d pat Cover Girl foundation over my red cheeks hoping to look, somehow, normal.  Crying has rearranged my features.  My strawberry-glossed lips won’t fool anyone.  My eyes fill until the tears spill over, sending rivers of black mascara running down my cheeks.  I suck in my breath, run cold water on a washcloth, and start again.

Once I pulled myself together, I tiptoed through the upstairs hallway, pausing on the landing.  Behind my parents’ bedroom door, their voices are muffled.  I kept on, down the carpeted stairs, hoping to blend in, undetected.  A casserole lady spots me from the kitchen, smiles brightly, and sets me up on a counter stool with a butter knife and a platter of turnover rolls.  Blankly, numbly, I buttered, pretending I am thankful to have landed this job.

As news of my brother’s death spread, the house filled with friends, teachers, cousins, neighbors, a carload of Dartmouth boys. They came as soon as they heard. Somewhere else in the house, I had a mother and a father and another brother, but we were all so limp with grief we had little to offer each other.

Then from the hallway, a hubub of voices.  Among them, I heard Chris’s rich, raspy voice.  He and my brother had been friends since high-school, or maybe forever.  Bear of a guy with dark hair and soft cheeks that flushed pink; Chris was the bad-boy, the one who dropped out of college and was tending bar in a restaurant downtown.  A graceful athlete, my brother edited the school newspaper and could take his pick of colleges.

As Chris strolled into the kitchen, I could feel the balance of power shift in my favor. He took the butter knife out of my hand, placed it on the counter, and shot the kitchen ladies a ‘whose idea was this?’ look.  Then he steered me past them and down the basement steps.  He settled into a chair and leaned forward, looking at me like he’d had the wind knocked out of him.  “Listen Sugarbear,”, he began, “when I was at Tulane, some messed up people ate mushrooms on purpose.”  He searched my eyes for signs of recognition.  “It was like doing drugs. Understand?”

I nodded, yes, even though I didn’t know what mushrooms and drugs had to do with each other.

“Your brother wasn’t like that.”

In the weeks before his death, my brother had been home, recovering from a car accident.  He’d carried his lanky frame on crutches, then a cane.  He’d just started walking, tentatively, on his own.  But weeks of slow progress had made him restless and, in a fit of boredom, he had picked a wild mushroom in the yard, identified it in a library book, and taken the tiniest bite.

That night, the mushroom sent a fireworks display ricocheting through his brain.  He’d been violently ill, hallucinating.  While he was in the hospital, my mother gave the doctor a brown-paper bag with a mushroom inside that matched the picture in the book. “Test it,” she told him, frantic with worry.  “Something is wrong.”

Three days later the doctor released my brother from the hospital and threw the paper bag in the trash.  “He’ll be just fine,” he told her.  Weeks later, the fireworks came back.

My brother was heading to Charlottesville to see some old friends but, instead, he went to our house in the mountains nearby.  He wrote a rambling note, pulled the car into the garage, slid Miles Davis into the cassette player, and listened to the purring engine
until he was gone.  When they didn’t hear from him, my father drove to the house, down ninety minutes of highway, and found him there.  Later, they would say, it was somewhere between a suicide and an accident.  An accidental-suicide.  I didn’t understand it all, but Chris was the only one who would tell me.

Hours after the funeral, when the crowd that filled our house had thinned, the casserole ladies labeled and froze the leftovers, wiped the Formica clean, and promised my mother they’d be back, each one a different day, before they went home.

But Chris stuck around.

“I’m going up to Charlottesville tomorrow.  Wanna come?”  I always did.  In the weeks that followed, Chris took me with him everywhere he went: fraternity parties at UVA bars in Shockoe Slip.  Unfailingly polite, he’d introduce me to his friends and offer me a cold beer.  He taught me how to mix a mimosa and beat the St. Elmo house pinball machine.  On long stretches of highway, he’d turn up the radio for a slip-sliding Allman Brothers guitar riff and say “Oh, he loved this one.”

When he threw parties at his apartment in the Fan, I’d be there, nursing a warm beer and watching a bong the size of a yardstick circle the room.  I didn’t really belong there; but I didn’t really belong anywhere else, either.  My friends in ninth-grade were sympathetic but my wounds were a little too fresh.  I was the accident by the side of the road, both fascinating and repulsive.

After a few months, Chris’s calls less often.  He eased me back into my world so gently that I never noticed exactly when French class and Cotillion came back into focus.

Years later, after we’d both grown up and moved away, I bumped into Chris at a Christmas party.  “Remember how you used to call me Sugarbear?”  I ventured.  “I just want to thank…”

“It was nothing,” he shrugged.  “We had some fun, didn’t we?”  “Hey, I want you to meet my wife…”

I hadn’t thought about Chris in years, but the memory of his kindness swam into my consciousness the other day, as I lay limp on a massage table.  I’d had second thoughts as I rushed to make the appointment, pressing the gas to get through a yellow light.  What was I thinking? I fumed, as I sorted the laundry-list of obligations that weren’t going away — pick up the prescription, get cash for the babysitter, call my editor back — I don’t have time for a massage.

But in the dimly lit room, as a woman named Vickie tucked the sheets and towels around me with the tender concern of a new mother, I decided to surrender.

“I think I’ll just be quiet,” I told her.

As she slid her capable hands over my skin and pressed her fingertips into my muscles, I remembered how Chris had patted the passenger set of his tan Volkswagen Beetle and said, “Get in.”  And I drifted back to 1976 and replayed the whole relationship over in my mind.  Only this time, I’m in my thirties but Chris is still a 21-year-old bartender.

He was just a kid, really.  And then it hits me.  No 21-year-old boy chooses for his sidekick a 14-year-old girl with a bad haircut and a broken heart.  When my world fell apart, Chris had scooped me up and let me stay a while, in his.

Two tears collect under my closed eyelids and spread like crescent moons until they spill out of the corner of my eyes and down my temples.  They are fresh and new; nothing like the salty tears of old sorrow.  I didn’t know it then, but I’d been on the receiving end of an act of grace.

A kindness so perfect, it took twenty years to grasp it.

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